
Contributors to Scientific American’s September 2024 Issue
Writers, artists, photographers and researchers share the stories behind the stories
Contributors to Scientific American’s September 2024 Issue
Writers, artists, photographers and researchers share the stories behind the stories
Review: How a Group of Women Launched Modern Cosmology
A new biography of astronomer Henrietta Leavitt celebrates meaning making in science
Read all the stories you want.
New Insights on Dinosaurs, Pain and Carbon Capture
How we’ll learn more about dark matter, quantum gravity and substitutes for lab animals
Science Improves When People Realize They Were Wrong
Science means being able to change your mind in light of new evidence
Review: The Science of Listening Goes Far Beyond the Ears
A new book about the art and science of listening explores our sonic universe
Trump’s ‘Gish Gallop’ Debate Tactic Comes from Creationists
A dishonest creationist debating tactic shouldn’t go unchallenged in American life. Or in national politics
Stonehenge’s Strangest Rock Came from 500 Miles Away
A new analysis of Stonehenge’s “Altar Stone” suggests Neolithic people walked or sailed some 500 miles to transport the six-ton boulder
When Should Kids Get a Smartphone?
Teens’ use of smartphones has been blamed for all manner of societal ills. So when should parents take the plunge and equip their kids with these devices?
Extreme Conditions and Ethical Dilemmas: The Archaeology of Human Sacrifice
A mountaintop burial site offers a glimpse into Inka life—but raises ethical questions about unearthing ancient human remains.
What Does the ‘Hobbit’ Fossil Discovery Teach Us about Our Tiny Human Relatives?
A tiny human relative called the hobbit, or Homo floresiensis, may have evolved from a larger ancestor that shrunk upon arriving on the Indonesian island of Flores, a new fossil suggests
American Science Slips into Dangerous Decline, Experts Warn, while Chinese Research Surges
The U.S. sorely needs a coordinated national research strategy, says Marcia McNutt, president of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences
19 Good News Science Stories to Savor This Summer
From lifesaving cancer treatments and frog “spas” to a view of the cosmos from your own backyard, science can keep you going through the long, hot days of summer