Scientific American Magazine
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Scientific American, the longest continuously published magazine in the U.S., has been bringing its reader's unique insights about developments in science and technology for more than 170 years. It is the essential guide to the most awe-inspiring advances in science and technology, explaining how they change our understanding of the world and shape our lives.
Scientific American Magazine
9h ago
In the 1970s a young psychologist challenged a popular theory of how we acquire language, launching a fierce debate that continues to this day ..read more
Scientific American Magazine
9h ago
The EPA has released four new pollution rules, most focusing on coal-fired power, as the final pieces of Biden’s push to clean up the power sector ..read more
Scientific American Magazine
12h ago
People understand how saving tropical forests is good for the planet, but temperate forests are equally indispensable in fighting climate change ..read more
Scientific American Magazine
12h ago
There has never been a better time to be or become a birder ..read more
Scientific American Magazine
18h ago
How “heart-centered” archeology is helping to find the Indigenous children who never came home from residential schools ..read more
Scientific American Magazine
18h ago
An environmental engineer provides a glimpse of the magnitude of the challenge to remove PFAS from water supplies and ways you can reduce these “forever chemicals” in your own drinking water ..read more
Scientific American Magazine
19h ago
Research on personality types in the middle of the extroversion-introversion scale is limited—yet the majority of people fall into this category ..read more
Scientific American Magazine
19h ago
A woman with life-threatening heart and kidney disease became the second person ever to receive a genetically modified pig kidney and the first person to receive a heart pump and a transplanted organ together ..read more
Scientific American Magazine
19h ago
California has hit record-breaking milestones in renewable electricity generation, showing that wind, water and solar are ready to cover our electricity needs ..read more
Scientific American Magazine
2d ago
Several marsupial species, including sugar gliders, independently evolved a way to make membranes that allow them to glide through the air ..read more