How Hurricane Season Went from Quiet to a 'Powder Keg'

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September 29, 2022

Weather

How Hurricane Season Went from Quiet to a 'Powder Keg'

For nearly two months, the Atlantic had no hurricane activity. Then September arrived with a flurry of storms

By Andrea Thompson

Public Health

Everything You Need to Know about Polio in the U.S.

People fully vaccinated against polio have little to fear

By Emily Willingham

Engineering

For 'The First Lady of Engineering,' Freedom Meant Facing Down Racism and Sexism ... And Breaking Her Own Rules

Yvonne Y. Clark, known as Y.Y. throughout her career, had a lifetime of groundbreaking achievements as a Black female mechanical engineer. In the second episode of the newest season of the Lost Women of Science podcast, we see Y.Y.'s true grit as she fights for recognition and a place at the science table

By Katie Hafner,Carol Sutton Lewis,The Lost Women of Science Initiative

Animals

Giraffes vs. Blue Whales vs. Dinosaurs: Contest Reveals Which One Builds Its Nervous System Fastest to Evade Predators

One megafauna extends its nerve fibers at an astonishing rate of five centimeters per day

By Douglas H. Smith,Jeffrey M. Rodgers,Jean-Pierre Dollé,Mathew J. Wedel

Animals

See How a Parasite Travels from Tiny Crustacean to Fish to Bird

A tiny bug manipulates the behavior of its hosts to ensure its unlikely life cycle

By Madhusree Mukerjee

Natural Disasters

How to Protect Puerto Rico's Power Grid from Hurricanes

Energy experts say localized solar plants could strengthen Puerto Rico's dangerously fragile grid

By Anna Blaustein

Culture

'Longtermism' Movement Misses the Importance of War

A moral movement called longtermism, which focuses on protecting humanity's future, dwells too much on artificial intelligence and not enough on war

By John Horgan

Public Health

The Government is Racing to Put Your Toilet Under Surveillance--For a Good Reason

A relatively new type of snooping—we will call it poop snooping—could help us all react more quickly to new coronavirus variants or to future pandemics.

By Luke Groskin

Planetary Science

Extra Hard Space Diamonds May Have Formed in an Ancient Cosmic Collision

A new formation method for rare "lonsdaleite" diamonds may illuminate a better way to produce them on Earth

By Daniel Leonard
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