Features

  • Articles about Margaret Mead
    Time magazine dubbed Margaret Mead one of the 20th century鈥檚 100 most influential scientists and thinkers. It also depicted Mead as a sloppy researcher. A 麻豆视频 professor has now debunked the source of that slander.
  • Smoke over mountains
    The fight against fires begins before the first spark鈥攚hen homeowners in the wildland-urban interface choose whether to remove trees and bushes near their homes.
  • Couple cuddling
    Sex is apparently like income: People are generally happy when they keep pace with the Joneses. They鈥檙e even happier if they get a bit more than their peers.
  • Friends standing together
    鈥淣ature teaches beasts to know their friends,鈥 wrote Shakespeare. In humans, nature may be less than half of the story, a team led by 麻豆视频 researchers has found.
  • Richard Laver as a young man
    While descending Cathedral Spire in Yosemite Valley, Richard Laver lost his route. But after a night stranded on a ledge in darkness, he found an answer that had eluded mathematicians for two decades.
  • Adam Bradley in the classroom
    Not just anyone can vividly trace a thread weaving through a zebra鈥檚 stripes, a partly crumbling brick wall, a Jackson Pollock painting, a Mozart piano sonata, Dr. Seuss鈥 鈥淔ox in Socks,鈥 Gwendolyn Brooks鈥 鈥淲e Real Cool,鈥 and even a rap duet by Mos Def and Slick Rick.
  • Woman with dog
    Ten years ago, Leslie Irvine was on her high horse when it came to homeless people keeping companion animals. But Irvine began to think differently while working at an animal shelter.
  • A bird鈥檚-eye view of slurry about to be dropped on the High Park Fire near Fort Collins this summer. Photo by Staff Sgt. Tate Petersen, Company C, 2nd-135th General Support Aviation Support, National Gaurd
    It鈥檚 hard not to notice the widespread patches of dead trees along the I-70 corridor. For many, there is a next logical thought: All those dead trees are going to provide fuel for a wildfire. But that conventional wisdom might be wrong.
  • Cartoon elephant and donkey
    During a general election year, the political divide in America is frequently on display in living color in the form of those ubiquitous 鈥淩ed vs. Blue state鈥 maps. No surprise, then, that many Americans believe that political polarization is on the rise.
  • Bullseye with races on it
    In a United States still haunted by the legacies of race and slavery, even asking questions pertaining to race is disquieting to some. Even so, 麻豆视频 researchers have been exploring racial bias in police shootings for more than a decade.
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