
Car-Free Cities Are the Future, Biometrics Reveal
Advanced tools for tracking people’s eye movements and facial expressions can be used to design better places Read More Scientific American Content: Global
Advanced tools for tracking people’s eye movements and facial expressions can be used to design better places Read More Scientific American Content: Global
The elephant bird was the heaviest bird to ever walk the earth. Also, its eggs were 150 times the size of chicken eggs, and thick
The periodic table, as well as evolution, won’t be taught to under-16s in India as they start the new school year Read More Scientific American
Crablike bodies are so evolutionarily favorable that they’ve evolved at least five different times Read More Scientific American Content: Global
Good news: the world is discussing a treaty to stem plastic pollution. Bad news: fossil-fuel interests are trying to weaken it Read More Scientific American Content: Global
Some of the most violent cosmic collisions occur silently in the vacuum of space, but with the right instrumental ears, we can still hear it happen. Here’s
Nyswanderweg, a pinky-sized residential street in Hamburg, Germany, is easy to miss. Yet it’s a rare and significant monument to Marie Nyswander. Read More Scientific
How electrons move, multiple personalities form and hookworms spread among pet dogs Read More Scientific American Content: Global
Human intelligence may be just a brief phase before machines take over. That may answer where the aliens are hiding Read More Scientific American Content: