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- 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
- Finding Peter Putnam - Nautilus
Nautilus Members enjoy an ad-free experience Log in or Join now Wheeler, who made key contributions to nuclear physics, general relativity, and quantum gravity, had thought more about the observer’s role in the universe than anyone—if there was a clue to that mystery anywhere, I was convinced it was somewhere in his papers
- Nautilus Subscription - Nautilus
A Nautilus subscription provides an experience of the endless possibilities and deep human connections that science offers Deep, undiluted, narrative storytelling brings science into the most important conversations we are having today
- 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 Unnatural History of Bird Flu - Nautilus
Nautilus Members enjoy an ad-free experience Log in or Join now There is a “frustrating lack of appreciation of the social and economic drivers of industrialisation and the inevitable effects on infectious disease emergence and transmission,” says Stephen Hinchliffe, a geographer at the University of Exeter
- In Search of the First Animals - Nautilus
Nautilus Members enjoy an ad-free experience Log in or Join now Scientists have long believed the Little Dal reefs were built entirely by microbes—mats of cyanobacteria that grew upward into mounds That’s how reefs were built for almost 2 billion years, long before animals began to populate the planet
- 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
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