|
- Nautilus | Science Connected
Nautilus is a different kind of science magazine Our stories take you into the depths of science and spotlight its ripples in our lives and cultures
- In Search of the First Animals - Nautilus
Nautilus Members enjoy an ad-free experience Log in or Join now If Turner is correct, animals may have evolved some 300 million years earlier than we thought—before, instead of after, Snowball Earth, when the planet was repeatedly covered in ice, and possibly slush
- When Did I Start Getting Cancer? - Nautilus
Nautilus Members enjoy an ad-free experience Log in or Join now Diagrams of this process look like a family tree, with one ancestor spawning many different descendants The ancestor cell is pluripotent, meaning it can form all types of blood cells; each generation down is a little less powerful, and a little more specific
- The Animals That Exist Between Life and Death - Nautilus
At the dawn of microbiology, scientists glimpsed unseen worlds and stumbled into a philosophical purgatory
- About Us - Nautilus
About Us Welcome to Nautilus Like Captain Nemo we’re embarked on a voyage into the wonders of the universe Our stories take you into the depths of science and spotlight its ripples in our lives and cultures We believe any subject in science, no matter how complex, can be explained with clarity and vitality
- Discovering the First Intersex Southern Right Whale - Nautilus
Nautilus Members enjoy an ad-free experience Log in or Join now Decades earlier, in 1989, researchers had used special crossbows to collect small skin samples from 10 southern right whales in their calving grounds off Argentina’s Valdés Peninsula, as part of an effort to assess the species’ genetic diversity
- Let Nautilus Fuel Your Love of Science - Nautilus
Subscribe to Nautilus today to discover new, surprising perspectives on how science interacts with all aspects of life Connect with science and its power to illuminate nature, humanity, and culture
- The Secret Lives of Moths - Nautilus
Nautilus Members enjoy an ad-free experience Log in or Join now Fortunately, new technologies are making this easier Along with better genetic sequencing techniques, automated monitoring approaches —such as camera traps coupled with computer vision—now allow the study of pollinators without the need to capture and euthanize them
|
|
|