A clip from the upcoming series "Prehistoric Planet: Ice Age" shows how iconic ice age creatures adapted to their changing environment as temperatures rose and ice sheets started to melt. When you ...
The seaweed, or marine algae, that you find in the ocean and washed up on the shore is a valuable source of information and innovation that can be important for art, science and sustainable climate ...
At first glance, art and science might seem like opposite worlds — one driven by imagination and emotion, the other by data and precision — but at their core, both seek to explore and explain the ...
Hank Green shares the fascinating story behind Journey to the Microcosmos, a YouTube channel that brings the hidden world of microbes to life. From collaborating with a dedicated microscopist in ...
No matter how long it's been since your school days, learning is a lifelong activity, and science trivia is a great way to keep those synapses firing. Whether you're skilled at seismology, have a ...
The Bird Banding Laboratory has turned duck hunters into citizen scientists. What happens if it is defunded? By Alexa Robles-Gil For more than a century, the Bird Banding Laboratory has placed small ...
During a printmaking class her first year at the University of Delaware, Isaura López thought a lot about bugs. The senior fine arts major said that she’s always been interested in the precision and ...
The University of Chicago has announced the winners of its 2025 “Science as Art” contest, which highlights images of innovative scientific research from the UChicago community. The contest drew dozens ...
Talking is one of the most demanding and complicated things we do. It requires being good communicators of our thoughts and feelings while being tuned-in listeners, wading through the possibilities ...
A new book by UC Santa Cruz astrophysicist and visual artist Nia Imara debuts tomorrow that explains the universe and traces how art has blended with science throughout human history. Painting the ...
“Even mathematical notions of proof [are] not always as robust... as they might seem,” according to this thought-provoking analysis. Kucharski (The Rules of Contagion), an epidemiology professor at ...
Do artists and scientists see the same thing in the shape of trees? As a scientist who studies branching patterns in living things, I’m starting to think so. Piet Mondrian was an early 20th-century ...