Video: What Goes Into Running The World’s Richest Resort? [1:06:43]

How cybercriminals turn paper checks stolen from mailboxes into bitcoin

Why Scientists Become Spies

A taste for sweet – an anthropologist explains the evolutionary origins of why you’re programmed to love sugar

Goldfish learn to drive a car to get food

Stephen Crane vs. The Police

Mysterious Footprints Suggest Neanderthals Climbed a Volcano Right After It Erupted

The Surprise Rescue-Within-a-Rescue in a Flooded Thai Cave

The World’s First Small Modular Nuclear Reactor Is Sending Power to the Grid

Enceladus’ plumes might not come from an underground ocean

How Y Combinator Changed the World

Woman’s Rare Disease Causes Her to Stiffen and Fall After a Sudden Noise

The most important computer you’ve never heard of

James Webb Space Telescope completes tricky sunshield deployment

The Dirty Work of Cleaning Online Reputations

To Study the Next Earth, NASA May Need to Throw Some Shade

An Injection of Chaos Solves Decades-Old Fluid Mystery

How could the Big Bang arise from nothing?

NASA’s Chief Scientist Quits, Says He Has a Plan to Terraform Mars

200 years ago today a man named Beale signed a cryptic letter that marked the beginning of a still-unsolved mystery

In VR, You Can Become Your Own Psychologist

How Body Farms and Human Composting Can Help Communities

Mathematicians Outwit Hidden Number Conspiracy

New patent-free COVID vaccine developed as “gift to the world”

The Long Afterlife of a Terrible Crime

Have scientists cracked the best way to drink champagne?

The Truth About Prohibition

Study: People Who Fall for Pseudoscience Use Less Evidence to Reach Conclusions

Could Being Cold Actually Be Good for You?

Super poo: the emerging science of stool transplants and designer gut bacteria

Quantum imaging: Pushing the boundaries of optics

On the misunderstood psychology of tribalism

Scientists Settled a Century-Old Family Drama Using DNA From Postcards

On the potential stability of tetra-neutronium

What if Math Is a Fundamental Part of Nature, Not Something Humans Came Up With?

The History of the Graphical User Interface — 1945 to 1980

Your attention didn’t collapse. It was stolen

Our article ‘The Traveller and His Baggage’ was among The Browser’s Best of 2021. Woohoo!

Why 2021 Was the Quickest Year Ever on Record

High-resolution lab experiments show how cells ‘eat’

New Atlas’s best photography of 2021

We will be mostly offline until 03 January 2022. Here is a link to enjoy a random evergreen article from our curated section

What does future warfare look like? It’s here already

America Once Experimented with Building Concrete Ships. Here’s Why It Didn’t Pan Out

Video: Why the James Webb Space Telescope looks like that [11:12]

FDA-approved eyedrops could replace reading glasses for $80 a month

Did Benjamin Franklin really discover electricity with a kite and key?

New Calculations Show That an Interstellar Bussard Ramjet Drive Would Need a Magnetic Field Stretching 150 Million Kilometres

How a handful of prehistoric geniuses launched humanity’s technological revolution

‘Fat Leonard’ podcasters release unaired recordings to public after subpoena order

Video: The Largest Small Hexagon [5:46]

Ancient human DNA found in ‘nit glue’, say scientists

A Neuroscientist Prepares for Death

On this day in 1916 Grigory Rasputin finally succumbed to poison, beating, bullets, and drowning

High-Speed Impacts May Have Shaped Venus’ History – And Explain Why It Is Uninhabitable

Railway lines once connected the Middle East

Why Do We Count Down to the New Year?

Kidnapped as a Boy, This Man’s Hand-Drawn Map of Home Helped Him Find His Mom

Wounded Knee Massacre: Why Did The US Army Attack The Lakota Sioux?

Webb continues to unfold; has enough fuel for over a decade