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Water That Knows No Border: How International Rivers Complicate Politics and Policy

Water That Knows No Border: How International Rivers Complicate Politics and Policy

Annette Uy

Imagine a river that winds its way through multiple countries, touching the lives of millions along its banks. It flows freely, indifferent to man-made borders and political tensions. This is the reality of international rivers, which serve as vital lifelines for many but also become sources of conflict and cooperation. Their very nature challenges nations ...

Oceans on Venus: A Radical Possibility

What If We Lived on Venus Instead of Earth?

Trizzy Orozco

Picture this: you wake up one morning and instead of the familiar blue sky, you see a thick, yellowish haze stretching endlessly above you. The air is so dense it feels like swimming through liquid mercury, and the temperature outside could literally melt lead. This isn’t some dystopian nightmare – this is what life would ...

Glow worms on the cave wall.

Caves of Glow: What Bioluminescent Insects Reveal About Evolution

Maria Faith Saligumba

Have you ever ventured into the depths of a dark cave only to be greeted by a mesmerizing glow? The spectacle of bioluminescent insects lighting up these subterranean worlds is nothing short of magical. But beyond their beauty, these glowing creatures offer profound insights into the story of evolution. They are nature’s own lanterns, illuminating ...

smiling woman in green jacket

Why Is Laughter So Contagious and What Is Its Purpose?

Suhail Ahmed

  We treat laughter like an afterthought – background noise to jokes, sitcoms, and awkward meetings – yet it behaves more like a social reflex than a private emotion. Scientists now see it as a biological broadcast that moves through groups with astonishing speed, reshaping chemistry in our brains and choreography in our bodies. The ...

4 Winged Dinosaur

Why Some Dinosaurs Had Four Wings—and Why That Didn’t Last

Maria Faith Saligumba

Imagine a time when our planet was populated by creatures that seem to defy the imagination. Among these ancient beings were dinosaurs that sported not two, but four wings. This curious adaptation raises intriguing questions about the evolution of flight and the survival of species. Why did some dinosaurs develop an extra set of wings, ...

What If the Sun Went Out for 7 Days?

What If the Sun Went Out for 7 Days?

Annette Uy

Imagine waking up one morning to find the sun has simply vanished from the sky. Not hidden behind clouds, not experiencing an eclipse, but completely extinguished like someone flipped a cosmic light switch. This isn’t science fiction anymore when we dive into the terrifying reality of what would happen if our life-giving star disappeared for ...

a farm with many buildings

The Ancient Adena: Unraveling Ohio’s Earliest Complex Societies

Suhail Ahmed

  They left no written records, yet their architecture rises from Ohio’s river valleys like headlines carved in earth. The Adena, active roughly from 1000 BCE to 100 CE, engineered thousands of conical mounds that still recalibrate how we define early complexity in North America. For decades, these earthworks were dismissed as curiosities – a ...