a black and white photo of various mri images

  We have all felt it: the urge to change lanes just before a car swerves, the inexplicable unease when someone seems charming but “off,” the sudden knowing that a choice is right long before we can say why. For centuries, intuition has been framed as mystical, feminine, or flaky – something to be distrusted … Read more

A tree similar to the mythological Tree of Life.

The Power of Trees How Planting One Can Shape Our Future

Maria Faith Saligumba

Trees are indispensable components of our planet’s ecosystem. They contribute to biodiversity, support wildlife, provide food and shelter, and maintain the ecological balance. Understanding their critical roles underscores why planting trees can make a significant difference. Carbon Sequestration: Combating Climate Change Trees absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere through photosynthesis, storing carbon in their wood … Read more

Dive 8 revealed another high density deep sea coral community at Wagner Seamount.

We’ve Explored Just 0.001% of the Deep Ocean—What Lies Beneath Remains a Mystery

April Joy Jovita

Despite covering 66% of Earth’s surface, the deep ocean remains largely unexplored. A new study reveals that humans have visually observed only 0.001% of the deep seafloor, an area roughly the size of Rhode Island. This lack of exploration leaves vast ecosystems, potential scientific discoveries, and unknown species hidden beneath the waves. How Scientists Measured … Read more

Conservation Icon: American Alligator & Swamp Ecosystems

Conservation Icon: American Alligator & Swamp Ecosystems

Annette Uy

Imagine a world where prehistoric giants silently patrol shadowy waters, their eyes glowing above the mirrored surface as the mist curls around ancient cypress knees. The American alligator is not just a relic of the past—it is a living symbol of survival, resilience, and the wild, tangled beauty of the southern swamps. Their story is … Read more

a close up of a human brain on a black background

10 Everyday Mysteries Science Still Struggles to Explain

Suhail Ahmed

  We like to think science has an answer for everything, from black holes to brain surgery, but some of the most stubborn mysteries are hiding in plain sight on an ordinary Tuesday morning. Why does time feel slow in a traffic jam yet vanish during a great conversation? How can two people walk through … Read more

a waterfall in the middle of a forest

10 Tallest Waterfalls in the UNted States

Suhail Ahmed

  Across the United States, some waterfalls are so high they seem to fall straight out of the sky, yet many people could not name a single one beyond the famous postcard icons. Beneath the mist and roar lies a quieter story: shifting rock layers, shrinking glaciers, and changing snowfall patterns that are already reshaping … Read more

10 Ancient Engineering Marvels That Show Remarkable Ingenuity

Suhail Ahmed

  Long before computer models and laser-guided cranes, human beings carved mountains, moved million‑pound stones, and re‑routed rivers with nothing more than hand tools, mathematics, and sheer persistence. For a long time, these ancient engineering feats were dismissed as primitive or mysterious, as if they must have relied on lost knowledge or even myth. But … Read more

two gray seal underwater

Animals That Thrive in Florida’s Indian River Lagoon

Suhail Ahmed

  At first glance, Florida’s looks like a calm, flat slash of water wedged between barrier islands and the Atlantic. Look closer, though, and it becomes something far stranger and more dramatic: a liquid crossroads where tropical and temperate species collide, where manatees graze alongside seagrass meadows, and where microscopic plankton quietly shape the fate … Read more

starry night sky over starry night

Our Universe Might Be a Living Organism, New Theories Suggest

Suhail Ahmed

  What if the universe isn’t a cold, indifferent void, but something more like a vast, slowly breathing creature? It sounds like science fiction, yet a growing number of physicists, cosmologists, and philosophers are taking versions of this idea seriously enough to write papers, build models, and argue at conferences about it. For them, the … Read more

Sulfur

The Only Natural Blue Flame Volcano on Earth

Maria Faith Saligumba

Imagine standing under a midnight sky, the world around you shrouded in darkness, when suddenly—against all odds—an eerie, electric blue fire dances across the mountainside. This isn’t a scene from a fantasy novel or a special effects marvel. It’s a real-life phenomenon that occurs at just one place on our planet: the legendary Kawah Ijen … Read more

The Underground Water System Discovered Beneath the Sahara Is Older Than the Nile and the Current Is Still Active

The Underground Water System Discovered Beneath the Sahara Is Older Than the Nile and the Current Is Still Active

Sameen David

Buried deep beneath the world’s largest hot desert is something that feels almost paradoxical: not just dry fossil sands, but a colossal reservoir of ancient water, moving in slow motion through rocks that formed long before the Nile carved its way to the Mediterranean. Scientists call these hidden reservoirs transboundary aquifer systems and fossil aquifers, … Read more