Latest Stories
The latest news and updates from Scientific American.
- Nature Evolution
Mammoth Genomes Provide Recipe for Creating Arctic Elephants
A catalog of the genetic differences between woolly mammoths and elephants reveals how the ice-age giants braved the cold - 60-Second Science Space
Space Supervoid Sucks Energy from Light
A vast region of space colder than expected is also largely devoid of galaxies, and the two observations are no coincidence. Clara Moskowitz reports
- Vocativ More Science
Twitter Account Tied to Texas Shooting Is Connected to ISIS
The account used the hashtag #texasattack before violence erupted Sunday - Scientific American Volume 312, Issue 5 Energy & Sustainability
Giant Waves Change Arctic Ecology and Weather
Towering seas can smash sea ice, with far-flung effects on climate and nature - Climatewire Energy & Sustainability
Global Warming May Spread Lyme Disease
Scientists tackle the difficult problem of how climate change aids the spread of the tick-borne disease - Nature Energy & Sustainability
Will Tesla's Battery for Homes Change the Energy Market?
Tesla did not reveal the price of its larger batteries for businesses and utilities, but it will sell residential models for $3,000—$3,500 - Special Editions Volume 24, Issue 1s Mind & Brain
Stem Cells Could Repair Parkinson’s Brain Damage
New methods for growing and transplanting cells offer hope for treating Parkinson’s and other degenerative diseases - News Space
Astronomers Seek Super-Size Hubble Successor to Search for Alien Life
Controversy swirls around a bold proposal for a bigger, better—and expensive—replacement for NASA’s premier space telescope - Nature More Science
Massive Underwater Volcano Erupts
An event at the Axial Seamount tests a new deep-sea observing network - Reuters More Science
Southern Michigan Shaken by 4.2 Magnitude Earthquake
Quakes are a rarity in a state more accustomed to snow storms and tornadoes - Scientific American Volume 312, Issue 5 Technology
The Anti-Drone Drone
A bigger, badder flying copter debuts to catch trespassers - Scientific American Mind Volume 26, Issue 3 Mind & Brain
Unsupervised Habits Reign in Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
A lack of control in the brain’s executive regions may allow repetitive behaviors to run amok - Illusion Chasers Mind & Brain
Star Wars Day: May the Fourth Be with You
16-year-old Paul Vermeesch recreate the impossible structures in M.C. Escher's Relativity--but with a Star Wars theme--in LEGO. - Scientific American Volume 312, Issue 5 Technology
Computing after Moore’s Law
The technologies chip makers hope can keep Moore’s Law alive - Scientific American Volume 312, Issue 5 Energy & Sustainability
May Flowers Bring Leaf Showers
The timing of spring determines autumn's onset - Scientific American Mind Volume 26, Issue 3 Mind & Brain
Hit the Gym after Studying to Boost Recall
Like other things that enhance alertness, exercise may help cement new facts in mind - TechMediaNetwork Health
A Little Bit of Walking Can Add up to Improve Your Health
Walking an extra two minutes per hour can actually make a difference, a new study suggests - Scientific American Volume 312, Issue 5 More Science
Book Review: Biophilia
Books and recommendations from Scientific American - Nature Space
Pluto May Have Icy Cap
The latest images from NASA's New Horizons spacecraft show a bright spot near the dwarf planet's pole
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