Help keep Salon independent

Topic: Massive Science (page 4)

FILE - This July 24, 2006 file photo shows a gray wolf at the Wildlife Science Center in Forest Lake, Minn.  (AP Photo/Dawn Villella, file) (AP)

Ancient dog bones reveal lifestyle clues

Jaime Chambers - Massive Science
Greta Thunberg and Charles Norman Shay in Caen, France, on July 21. (Twitter)

Tourists visit Cuverville Island, Antarctica, on March 04, 2016. The Antarctic tourism industry is generally considered to have begun in the late 1950s when Chile and Argentina took more than 500 fare-paying passengers to the South Shetland Islands aboard a naval transportation ship. The concept of 'expedition cruising,' coupled with education as a major theme, began when Lars-Eric Lindblad led the first traveler's expedition to Antarctica in 1966. Prior to this, human activity in Antarctica was limited to the early explorers, those seeking fortune in the exploitation of seals and whales, and more recently to scientific research and exploration. Antarctica's physical isolation, extreme climate and remarkable wilderness values are a great part of its attraction for tourism. AFP PHOTO/EITAN ABRAMOVICH / AFP / EITAN ABRAMOVICH        (Photo credit should read EITAN ABRAMOVICH/AFP/Getty Images) (Eitan Abramovich/AFP/Getty Images)

Establishing MPAs in the Southern Ocean

Seth Sykora-Bodie - Massive Science
(Getty/Portra)

Advertisement:
(Getty/Just_Super)

A car kicks up dust as it drives by corn fields on August 7, 2012 in State Center, Iowa. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

Making the Dust Bowl look tame

Dan Samorodnitsky - Massive Science
Doctor and pharmacist Gilles Leboucher prepares a diluted solution of phages from three different concentrated types of phages on March 8, 2019, at the Croix-Rousse hospital, in Lyon, central-eastern France. (Romain Lafabregue/AFP/Getty Images)

How these viruses saved a girl’s life

Maddie Bender - Massive Science
(Getty Images)

Advertisement:
Salon logo

It's time to study fungus in microbiomes

Adriana Romero-Olivares - Massive Science

Climate change destroying ancient murals

Alan Thompson - Massive Science
(Getty/stock-eye)

Can we fix loneliness with technology?

Sophie Okolo - Massive Science
(AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

Even brief teenage smoking alters brain

Constanza Paulina Silva Gallardo - Massive Science
Advertisement:
(Getty Images)

Sex isn’t binary, stop acting like it is

Liza Brusman - Massive Science
Participants sign up to take part in the World Record Ice Bucket Challenge at Etihad Stadium on August 22, 2014 in Melbourne, Australia. (Scott Barbour/Getty Images)

Tests on stem cells may be revolutionary

Carina Seah - Massive Science
This picture taken on October 18, 2018 shows newborn green turtles heading to the sea after being released from a protected area on Thameehla Island. - Peril plagues the young life of a baby turtle in Myanmar; if the crabs don't get them before they scramble from the beach to the sea, poachers or fishing trawlers may do - while habitat destruction also decimates their numbers. Myanmar's waters boast five of the world's seven sea turtle species, including the critically endangered hawksbill, the endangered green turtle as well as the olive ridley, leatherback and loggerhead turtles, all listed as vulnerable. (Photo by Ye Aung THU / AFP) / PHOTO ESSAY by Ye Aung THU        (Photo credit should read YE AUNG THU/AFP/Getty Images) (Ye Aung Thu/AFP/Getty Images))

US-Mex border toughens life for turtles

Tim Briggs - Massive Science
A volunteer of the NGO 'Canarias Libre de Plasticos' (Canary Islands free of plastics) carries out a collection of microplastics and mesoplastic debris to clean the Almaciga Beach, on the north coast of the Canary Island of Tenerife, on July 14, 2018. (Desiree Martin/Getty Images)

Nowhere is safe from plastic pollution

Rebecca Dzombak - Massive Science
Advertisement:
A nurse prepares a flu shot. (AP/David Goldman)

Why the flu came twice this year

Patricia L. Foster - Massive Science
A Hawaiian monk seal, an endangered species, lies on a Waikiki beach in Honolulu on Thursday, September 15, 2016. (AP Photo/Audrey McAvoy) (AP)

The future color of the ocean

Madeline Bender - Massive Science
(Getty/Marilyn Nieves)

Tidying up is good for your brain

Ive Velikova - Massive Science
(AP Photo/Firdia Lisnawati) (AP)

The 1919 solar eclipse experiment

Joshua Roebke - Massive Science
Advertisement:
(AP Photo/Salvatore Allegra)

Using volcanoes to study climate change

Cassie Freund - Massive Science
(Getty/Nomad)

Treat sick people with terminal disease

Gabriela Serrato Marks - Massive Science
In this Friday, July 22, 2016 photo, a Pokemon Go player attempts to catch Charmander, one of Pokemon's most iconic creature, in New Delhi, India.  (AP Photo/Thomas Cytrynowicz) (AP)

Playing Pokémon altered your brain

Hannah Thomasy - Massive Science
A waterfall in the Amazon rainforest. (Shutterstock)

Biodiversity loss & the end of the world

Cassie Freund - Massive Science
« Previous
Page: 4
Next »