Biology It’s still a mystery how snails ended up scattered around the globe By Thom van Dooren/MIT Press Reader
Biology With bulging eyes and a killer smile, this sabertooth was an absolute nightmare By Laura Baisas
Biology ‘Humanity on thin ice’ says UN, but there is still time to act on climate change By Laura Baisas
Dinosaurs An extinct 10-foot-long eagle could pick up kangaroos with its terrifying talons By Laura Baisas
Dinosaurs A gator-faced fish shaped like a torpedo stalked rivers 360 million years ago By Laura Baisas
Dinosaurs Newly found titanosaur eggs reveal dino nurseries once teemed with baby giants By Laura Baisas
Dinosaurs Millions of years ago, marine reptiles may have used Nevada as a birthing ground By Laura Baisas
Space ‘Oumuamua isn’t an alien probe, but it might be the freakiest comet we’ve ever seen By Briley Lewis
The Weirdest Thing I Learned This Week A stork impaled by a 30-inch spear flew thousands of miles to make it home By PopSci Staff
The Weirdest Thing I Learned This Week Your earwax contains multitudes—of secrets about your health By PopSci Staff
The Weirdest Thing I Learned This Week The Monty Python ‘silly walk’ could replace your gym workout By PopSci Staff
The Weirdest Thing I Learned This Week A sea sponge’s sneeze lasts a very, very long time By PopSci Staff
The Weirdest Thing I Learned This Week These long-fingered lemurs pick and eat their boogers, just like humans By PopSci Staff
The Weirdest Thing I Learned This Week Snakes may not have legs, but they do have two penises By PopSci Staff
The Weirdest Thing I Learned This Week Bees choose violence when attempting honey heists By PopSci Staff
‘The Memory of Tomatoes,’ a short story from an alternate future By Bonnie Jo Stufflebeam / Mar 16, 2022
Amazing new sci-fi books to give (and then borrow from) your friends By Mary Beth Griggs / Dec 3, 2017