Scientific American » Biology
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Scientific American covers the advances in research and discovery that are changing our understanding of the world and shaping our lives. Founded 1845, it is the oldest continuously published magazine in the United States and now reaches more than 10 million people around the world. Scientific American is the essential guide to the most awe-inspiring advances in science and technology,..
Scientific American » Biology
1w ago
Unique patterns of neuron activation help tiny birds catalog thousands of scattered food caches ..read more
Scientific American » Biology
1w ago
Eclipses can affect animals, and biologists are preparing to see what happens during totality on April 8 ..read more
Scientific American » Biology
1w ago
Rat remains from shipwrecks and dig sites show how two rodent species duked it out in eastern North America ..read more
Scientific American » Biology
1w ago
Periodical cicadas have a clever hack to help them figure out when to emerge after more than a decade underground ..read more
Scientific American » Biology
1w ago
An elite athlete’s metabolism mostly looks different from that of a person with COVID—but their occasional similarities can reveal important insights into health and disease ..read more
Scientific American » Biology
2w ago
Thirsty cicadas produce more powerful jets of urine than some mammals ..read more
Scientific American » Biology
2w ago
Giving cells an appetite for cancer could enhance treatments ..read more
Scientific American » Biology
2w ago
When zooming forward, hummingbirds rely on a unique internal “cruise control ..read more
Scientific American » Biology
2w ago
Like humans, these small Japanese birds communicate abstract concepts with gestures ..read more
Scientific American » Biology
2w ago
If you take a journey into the depths of the slime all around us, you find yourself starting to understand that mucus is a miracle ..read more