Articles for author: Suhail Ahmed

closeup photography of white owl on snow

12 U.S. Wildlife Stories to Watch This Winter (And the Science Behind Them)

Suhail Ahmed

  Winter flips a switch across American landscapes, revealing dramas that summer foliage hides. From whales calving in warm Atlantic eddies to bats tucked in frigid caves, animals are making high-stakes choices you can track in real time. Scientists follow with drones, acoustic arrays, GPS collars, and clever models that turn fleeting sightings into hard ...

Could Humans Ever Regrow Limbs? Here’s the Latest Research

Suhail Ahmed

Across the animal kingdom, limb regeneration is almost routine, yet for humans it still reads like a promise from the edge of science fiction. Researchers are now mapping the precise signals – chemical, electrical, and mechanical – that tell cells how to rebuild complex structures instead of sealing the wound with a scar. In the ...

12 U.S. Springs So Clear You Can See the Aquifer at Work

Suhail Ahmed

Across the United States, a handful of springs run so limpid that the ground beneath seems to breathe. Scientists see them as real-time readouts of the hidden plumbing of limestone and sand; travelers see impossible blues and greens that look edited by nature itself. The mystery is simple to state and hard to solve: how ...

green trees under white sky during daytime

10 U.S. Forests Using “Good Fire” to Prevent Mega-Fires – Results

Suhail Ahmed

  Across the American landscape, a quiet revolution is running on smoke and science. After decades of trying to stamp out every spark, land managers are bringing back planned, low-intensity burns – prescribed fire – to head off the infernos that turn skies orange and towns anxious. These carefully timed burns mimic the small, frequent ...

The Ancient Tunnel Networks Beneath America No One Can Fully Explain

Suhail Ahmed

Across North America, rumors whisper of underground passageways that seem to trace secret routes beneath cities, deserts, and mountains. Some are clearly natural – carved by lava, water, or ice – while others hint at human hands, from Indigenous refuge caves to mining adits and Prohibition-era corridors. Yet every time archaeologists and geologists illuminate one ...

Can the Human Mind Detect Earthquakes Before Instruments Do?

Suhail Ahmed

In a world of sirens, sensors, and smartphone alerts, a quiet question lingers at the edges of science: can people feel an earthquake coming before machines call it? The idea is seductive, fueled by stories of sudden unease, pressure in the ears, or an uncanny urge to move just seconds before the floor ripples. Seismology, ...

12 U.S. Drought-Born Discoveries Revealed by Low Water

Suhail Ahmed

Across the United States, shrinking rivers and receding reservoirs have turned shorelines into surprise archives. Each drop exposes something new: dinosaur tracks stamped into Cretaceous mud, the bones of drowned towns, the hardware of past wars and work. The mystery is stark – what else is hiding beneath the water we thought we knew – ...

12 U.S. Places to See “Sea Smoke” – The Physics of Frozen Fog

Suhail Ahmed

When Arctic air slams into water that’s still holding autumn’s leftover warmth, the surface starts to smoke – except it’s not smoke at all. It’s sea smoke, a fleeting veil of vapor that rises in ragged wisps, then blooms into ghostly plumes. Photographers chase it, mariners respect it, and physicists love it because the recipe ...

Why Some Volcanoes Never Erupt – But Never Sleep Either

Suhail Ahmed

They hiss, heave, and warm the ground beneath our feet, yet decade after decade they refuse to blow. Around the world, restless volcanoes draw tight circles of worry on hazard maps as instruments detect tremor, swelling, and gas pulses that hint at fire still moving below. Scientists call this persistent unrest, a state that can ...

a view of a river surrounded by mountains

8 American Canyons Carved Shockingly Fast – Flood Geology Explained

Suhail Ahmed

  Across the American West, rivers and floods have sometimes sliced rock with astonishing speed, leaving canyons that look ancient yet tell stories measured in days, seasons, or a burst of catastrophic flow. The mystery is simple and thrilling: how can landscapes that usually evolve grain by grain suddenly leap forward in dramatic steps? Hydrology ...