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  • The Social Contagion Effect — Why Suicide, Laughter and Yawning All Spread the Same Way
    9 minutes

    The Social Contagion Effect — Why Suicide, Laughter and Yawning All Spread the Same Way

    Something strange happened the month Marilyn Monroe died. Suicide rates across the US climbed by 12 percent — not from grief, not from coincidence, but from a force so embedded in human neurology that it also explains why you yawn when others do, and why a stranger’s laughter pulls one from you before you’ve even… Read more


  • This Insect Is Born Already Pregnant — With Grandchildren
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    8 minutes

    This Insect Is Born Already Pregnant — With Grandchildren

    An aphid is born already pregnant. Her daughters — still forming inside her — are pregnant too. Three generations exist simultaneously in a body the size of a sesame seed. This is not science fiction. This is the aphid life cycle, and it is one of the most unsettling reproductive strategies evolution has ever invented. Read more


  • Why Humans Are the Only Animal That Dies of Embarrassment
    8 minutes

    Why Humans Are the Only Animal That Dies of Embarrassment

    Dying of embarrassment isn’t just a figure of speech — your body treats social failure like a physical threat. But here’s what’s stranger: no other animal on Earth experiences this. Discover the neuroscience, evolution, and psychology behind why humans alone are wired to feel destroyed by a single moment of social shame. Read more


  • The Bystander Effect — Why More People Means Less Help in a Crisis
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    6 minutes

    The Bystander Effect — Why More People Means Less Help in a Crisis

    In a crisis, you’d expect more people to mean more help. The Bystander Effect reveals the disturbing opposite — the bigger the crowd, the less likely anyone is to act. It’s not cruelty. It’s psychology. And once you understand the hidden forces freezing people in place, you’ll never look at a crowd the same way… Read more


  • The Day Earth Almost Lost Its Oxygen — The Great Oxidation Event
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    7 minutes

    The Day Earth Almost Lost Its Oxygen — The Great Oxidation Event

    Two billion years before the first animal drew breath, a microscopic organism was quietly dismantling the world. The Great Oxidation Event explained is one of Earth’s most dramatic untold stories — how cyanobacteria accidentally poisoned an entire planet, froze it solid, and in doing so, made all complex life possible. This is that story. Read more


  • The Science of Déjà Vu: What’s Actually Happening in Your Brain
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    6 minutes

    The Science of Déjà Vu: What’s Actually Happening in Your Brain

    That eerie “I’ve been here before” feeling has a name — and a surprisingly rich scientific explanation. The science of déjà vu reveals a fascinating glitch in how your brain constructs and monitors memory. It’s not mystical, not random — it’s your mind catching itself mid-error. Here’s what’s actually happening inside your brain. Read more


  • The Internet of the Forest: How Mycorrhizal Networks Connect the Natural World
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    6 minutes

    The Internet of the Forest: How Mycorrhizal Networks Connect the Natural World

    Beneath the forest floor lies one of nature’s most extraordinary secrets — the internet of the forest. A vast, invisible web of fungal threads connects trees, shuttles nutrients, and carries chemical distress signals across entire woodlands. This underground network has kept forests alive for 450 million years, and science is only beginning to understand its… Read more


  • The surprising reason humans are the only animals that cook food
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    8 minutes

    The surprising reason humans are the only animals that cook food

    Why do humans cook food when no other animal on Earth does? The answer goes far deeper than taste or culture. Scientists believe cooking and human evolution are directly linked — fire unlocked calories our raw-food ancestors couldn’t access, fuelling the brain growth that made us uniquely, unmistakably human. Read more


  • The Social Media Experiment That Proved Loneliness Is Engineered
    10 minutes

    The Social Media Experiment That Proved Loneliness Is Engineered

    Half of all American adults report feeling lonely — and the Surgeon General has called it an epidemic. But the research points to something more unsettling than a personal problem. Social media loneliness, the experiments show, is not a side effect of the technology. In many respects, it is the product. Here is the evidence. Read more


  • The Cosmic Void So Large It Challenges Everything We Know About the Universe
    10 minutes

    The Cosmic Void So Large It Challenges Everything We Know About the Universe

    There is a place in the universe 330 million light-years wide where almost nothing exists. No stars, no galaxies, no dark matter — just space. It is called the Boötes cosmic void, and its existence, according to our best models of how the universe works, should be essentially impossible. Here is what it means that… Read more


  • The Black Death Letter That Predicted the Modern World With Terrifying Accuracy
    8 minutes

    The Black Death Letter That Predicted the Modern World With Terrifying Accuracy

    In 1348, a man sat in a city full of corpses and wrote down what he saw. What Giovanni Boccaccio recorded — worker revolts, institutional collapse, scapegoating, the flight of the wealthy — was not prophecy. It was pattern. And those patterns have repeated, with terrifying accuracy, every century since. Including ours. Read more


  • 10 Things Your Brain Does While You Sleep That Will Genuinely Unsettle You
    9 minutes

    10 Things Your Brain Does While You Sleep That Will Genuinely Unsettle You

    You close your eyes and assume nothing much is happening. You are spectacularly wrong. While you sleep, your brain paralyses your body, washes away toxic proteins, deletes memories, and runs a full simulation of reality. Here are 10 things your brain does in the dark — and none of them will let you sleep quite… Read more


  • NASA Found a Planet That Rains Glass — Sideways
    8 minutes

    NASA Found a Planet That Rains Glass — Sideways

    Sixty-three light-years from Earth sits a planet that looks exactly like home — deep cobalt blue, almost peaceful. But its atmosphere burns at 1,000 degrees, its winds move at seven times the speed of sound, and every single day it rains molten glass. Sideways. This is the glass rain planet — and it will change… Read more


  • Lab-Grown Blood Is Here — And It Could End Donor Shortages Forever
    6 minutes

    Lab-Grown Blood Is Here — And It Could End Donor Shortages Forever

    For centuries, there has been only one way to get blood into someone who needed it — find a willing donor and hope. Now, for the first time in history, scientists have grown red blood cells in a laboratory and transfused them into a living human being. Lab grown blood is no longer a theory.… Read more


  • The Science Behind First Impressions
    6 minutes

    The Science Behind First Impressions

    Your brain forms a complete judgment about a stranger in just 100 milliseconds — before a handshake, before a hello, before a single word. The science behind first impressions reveals how ancient survival instincts, body language, and unconscious bias shape every new connection you make. Understanding it won’t just fascinate you — it’ll change how… Read more


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A day on Venus is longer than a year on Venus. It takes 243 Earth days to rotate once, but only 225 Earth days to orbit the Sun.

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