
You know that prickly feeling on the back of your neck, the one that makes you suddenly straighten up and glance over your shoulder? You do a quick scan, see nothing unusual, and tell yourself you’re just being paranoid. But that quiet, stubborn sense of being watched lingers anyway, like a shadow you can’t quite … Read more

Psychology Says People Who Prefer Thunderstorms to Sunshine Are Processing Dopamine Differently Than 78% of the Population
Sameen David
If you secretly light up when the sky goes dark and thunder starts to roll, you might have wondered what that says about you. Most people rush toward beaches and blue skies, but you feel strangely at home when it’s gloomy, loud, and electric outside. It can even feel like your brain wakes up while … Read more

The Personality Trait That Makes Every Zodiac Sign Unforgettable
Sameen David
If you think back on the people you can’t seem to forget, it’s usually not their looks, their job, or even what they said that sticks with you. It’s the way they made you feel. That unforgettable spark often lines up with one standout personality trait, and astrology offers a surprisingly useful lens for understanding … Read more

Why Some Researchers Think Consciousness Exists Beyond Neurons Alone
Sameen David
You have probably been told that your mind is just your brain doing its thing, a dense forest of neurons firing like a biological computer. That story is tidy, comforting, and fits neatly with modern neuroscience. But when you look more closely, you start to see cracks in that simple picture, and those cracks are … Read more

How Telescopes Help Us Look Back in Time
Suhail Ahmed
Every time we point a powerful telescope at the night sky, we stage a quiet confrontation with time itself. Light doesn’t arrive instantly; it travels, carrying a record of where it came from. That simple limitation turns observatories into time machines, letting us witness galaxies as they were long before humans existed. The big story … Read more

8 Hidden Wonders of the Earth That Science Is Still Struggling to Explain
Sumi
We like to think we’ve mapped, measured, and modelled our planet down to the last pebble. Satellites scan every coastline, AI crunches climate data, and deep-sea robots roam the ocean floor. And yet, scattered across Earth are places and phenomena that quietly shrug at our confidence and whisper: you still don’t really know me. … Read more

Nature’s Final Whisper? 40 New Moth Species Found in a Land Facing Ecological Crisis
Jan Otte
Buried deep within European museum archives, amidst thousands of mounted insects, was a secret that had the potential to rechart our definition of biodiversity in one of the most imperiled ecosystems on Earth. Researchers from the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin have discovered 40 previously unknown moth species in the Philippines, all entirely new to science. … Read more

Microbes and the Human Brain: Exploring the Link Between Gut Bacteria and Mental Health
Trizzy Orozco
The human body is a complex ecosystem bustling with microorganisms, many of which are vital for our health. Among them, gut bacteria have garnered significant attention for their potential influence beyond digestion. Emerging research suggests that these microbes may play a crucial role in mental health, shaping our emotions and cognition in ways we are … Read more

Did You Know? What Lives in Your Gut Could Be the Future of Liver Disease Treatment
Jan Otte
Researchers have found an unlikely hero in the fight against one of the world’s most common and stubborn liver diseases, an unsuspecting gut fungus. New research suggests that Fusarium foetens, a bacterium found in the human gut, may hold the key to treating metabolic-dysfunction-associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD), which afflicts over 1 in 4 adults … Read more

Glowworms in the Waitomo Caves: Bioluminescence, Evolution, and Sticky Silk Traps in the Dark
It’s almost impossible to describe the shock of stepping into the pitch-black Waitomo Caves and suddenly looking up to see a galaxy of blue-green stars sprinkled across the ceiling. But those aren’t stars—they’re living creatures, tiny glowworms, each one casting its eerie, magical light in the darkness. For anyone who has witnessed it, the scene … Read more

How Climbing Vines Outsmart Forest Giants (Without Lifting a Leaf)
They don’t build skyscrapers; they steal them. In forests from Panama to Pennsylvania, climbing vines hitch a ride up the bodies of trees, saving energy on wood and spending it on leaves, speed, and stealth. Scientists are now piecing together the playbook behind this apparent shortcut, revealing a suite of strategies that turn tree architecture … Read more

The Big “What Ifs” of Science – A Teen-Friendly Guide to Thought Experiments
Imagine stopping time on the edge of a black hole, or shrinking small enough to surf a bloodstream like a white-water kayaker. Thought experiments turn that kind of wild picture into a serious tool, helping scientists probe ideas that are too big, too tiny, or too risky to test in real life. They’re the brain’s … Read more

10 Unique Habitats on Earth Where Life Thrives Against All Odds
On a planet that seems increasingly mapped, modeled, and monitored, some of Earth’s most astonishing stories of survival are still unfolding in places most of us will never see. From lakes that could strip paint to mines hotter than a summer highway, living things are quietly rewriting what we thought biology could withstand. This … Read more

How Maria Sibylla Merian’s Illustrations Shaped the Study of Entomology
Maria Sibylla Merian, a name that resonates with significance in the world of entomology, was an artist and naturalist whose work greatly influenced the study of insects. Living during a time when women were often excluded from scientific endeavors, Merian broke through societal constraints to become one of the first to document the life cycles … Read more