The Mind-Blowing Mathematics of Sunflowers …From Scientific American Magazine on Their 175th Birthday
On their 175th birthday, the oldest regularly published magazine in America, Scientific American, explains Fibonacci sequences in sunflowers.
On their 175th birthday, the oldest regularly published magazine in America, Scientific American, explains Fibonacci sequences in sunflowers.
The first new undersea base in over 30 years, Fabien, the grandson of Jacques Cousteau, hopes Proteus will be the ISS of the oceans.
Nature and Medrxiv studies on COVID-19 immunology indicates memory T-cell response and cross-protection, giving long-lasting immunity.
The World Bank's Kokaral dam project has raised water levels and replenished fish in the North Aral Sea, reviving Kazakhstan fishing towns.
After remaining unseen to scientists for 50 years, this tiny Somali sengi, or elephant shrew, has been rediscovered living in Djibouti.
Biologists and chemical engineers at UC San Diego have made biodegradeable flip flops from algae that need only 16 weeks to decompose.
In Mount Rainier National Park, a family of wolverines have become the first of their species to inhabit the park in over 100 years.
Both companies and individuals in the U.S.A. are giving more to charity during the coronavirus pandemic, say new surveys.
Foxtrot the United Nations World Food Program's mascot dog brings smiles to the Rohingya at Cox's Bazar refugee camp.
A smog-cleaning mural using special paints in Warsaw by local artists was organized by Converse as part of their City-Forests campaign.
Kevin Costner has produced an iPhone app that tells stories of local history related to where you and your family are driving on a road trip.
Mighty Buildings, an Oakland, California construction company, is 3D-printing entire houses in 24 hours–and they're stylist and cheap.