Author Archives: agnieszka

mystery of walking of water solved

No, walking on water is not a miracle, at least not for the small insects known as water striders. But even for striders, the ability has remained mysterious — until now. John W. M. Bush and his colleagues from the … Continue reading

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the nighttime is the right time

After all this time, people are still debating nature vs. nurture: whether humans are blank slates, shaped by their external environments, or whether they’re completely determined by their genes. A complex question, and one I’m not particularly interested in. I’m … Continue reading

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words and music

Want your children to remember their vocabulary lists? Perhaps you should make them take music lessons. Music training improves verbal memory in children, according to a study published in the July issue of Neuropsychology. Agnes S. Chan, a psychologist at … Continue reading

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fleas dethroned as jumping champs

At the Insect Olympics, the froghopper, also known as the spittlebug, has just set the world record for the high jump. The tiny, thumbtack-sized insect can reach heights of 70 centimeters (more than 2 feet), equivalent to a man leaping … Continue reading

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sky higher

The sky is rising and human-caused changes in ozone and greenhouse gases are largely to blame, say researchers in the July 25 Science. The height of the tropopause — the boundary between the stratosphere and the troposphere, the atmosphere’s lowest … Continue reading

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confessions of a birdaholic

It all started with a stuffed loon. I’m not usually a souvenir type of girl, but I had enjoyed my trip to Canada last summer, and a stuffed loon, at that moment, seemed just right. It was a small Audubon … Continue reading

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planet more likely to revolve around heavy metal star

Last year, it seemed as if the entire planet revolved around Ozzy Osbourne, and now there’s a scientific explanation (if the Oz were a gargantuan exploding ball of hydrogen, that is). Stars rich in iron, nickel, and other metallic elements … Continue reading

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poetry red in tooth and claw

Poems are duking it out in a Darwinian sense on David Rea’s website. He’s designed a computer program that allows poems to evolve. Starting with 1,000 random words culled from “Hamlet,” “Beowulf,” and the “Iliad,” among others, his program randomly … Continue reading

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why doesn’t she throw the bum out?

Some women just give and give to the men in their lives, never getting anything but the fuzzy end of the lollipop in return. And so do the females of the semi-aquatic insect species known as the Zeus bug. In … Continue reading

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city bird, country bird

It’s a cliche that people who live in large cities generally talk faster and louder than their rural counterparts. And it looks like city birds also sing differently than their country cousins. In the July 17 Nature, Hans Slabbekoorn and … Continue reading

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