Why Being “Hangry” May Start in the Brain, Not the Belly Discover Mag Par :Anastasia Scott 12 décembre 2025 à 22:25 Learn how hunger affects mood only when people consciously feel it — not simply when energy levels drop.
Raccoons Have Hidden Rules to Navigate Cities, and Refuse to Cross Roads, Even for Easy Meals Discover Mag Par :Anastasia Scott 12 décembre 2025 à 21:15 Learn how motion sensors and GPS tracking uncovered how raccoons weigh risk against reward.
A Marine Predator the Size of a Bus Patrolled Ancient Rivers 66 Million Years Ago Discover Mag Par :Anastasia Scott 11 décembre 2025 à 22:40 Learn how chemical clues reveal a mosasaur was hunting in freshwater rivers as the Cretaceous seaway receded.
In a First, Watch as Orcas Team Up With Dolphins to Boost Their Salmon-Hunting Success Discover Mag Par :Jenny Lehmann 12 décembre 2025 à 00:00 Learn how resident orcas collaborate with local dolphins to hunt salmon while offering protection for their smaller cousins in return.
Purrs Convey Cats' Identities Better Than Meows — Domestication Reveals Why Discover Mag Par :Jack Knudson 11 décembre 2025 à 23:40 Learn why purrs say more about a cat's identity than its meows, and how domestication forever changed the way cats communicate with their owners.
Your Backyard Hammock Has a 4,000-Year-Old History and Helped Shape the Americas Discover Mag Par :Stephanie Edwards 11 décembre 2025 à 23:35 Learn the untold story of the hammock, and how it was used by both Indigenous cultures and European colonizers.
A Tatooine-Like Planet Is Revealing How Worlds Form Around Two Suns Discover Mag Par :Anastasia Scott 11 décembre 2025 à 23:30 Learn how the discovery of a young planet orbiting two suns is revealing how worlds form and survive in binary star systems.
Over 400,000-Year-Old Evidence of Fire-Making Unearthed — Thousands of Years Earlier Than Once Thought Discover Mag Par :Monica Cull 11 décembre 2025 à 22:55 Learn more about the creation of fire, and how new artifacts show that fire was used tens of thousands of years earlier than previously believed.
From DNA to the Fossil Record, Here's Why We Have a Good Idea of What Neanderthals Looked Like Discover Mag Par :Sara Novak 11 décembre 2025 à 15:00 Learn more about how researchers can take evidence from the past to better shape our idea of what Neanderthals looked like.
As an Ancient Cow Species Foraged For Seagrass, it Shaped Its Surroundings Around 21 Million Years Ago Discover Mag Par :Sam Walters 11 décembre 2025 à 18:30 Meet Salwasiren qatarensis, a small, ancient sea cow species whose fossils were found in Qatar, in one of the world’s biggest marine mammal bonebeds.
Why Brown Dwarfs May Explain the Main Differences Between Stars and Planets Discover Mag Par :Jake Parks 11 décembre 2025 à 15:00 Learn more about brown dwarfs, the cosmic misfits that blur the line between planet and star.
Mini-Nose Models Sniff Out the Reasons Why RSV Infection Turns Deadly in Infants Discover Mag Par :Jack Knudson 11 décembre 2025 à 00:15 Learn what happens to cells inside the nose during an RSV infection, and why infants are so vulnerable to the virus.
Chemical in Dark Chocolate May Slow Your Biological Age by Tweaking Gene Switches Discover Mag Par :Stephanie Edwards 10 décembre 2025 à 23:50 Learn about theobromine, a chemical compound in dark chocolate that is linked to anti-aging.
How Energy Drinks’ Hidden Caffeine Could Contribute to Long-Term Health Risks Discover Mag Par :Anastasia Scott 10 décembre 2025 à 23:30 Learn how high caffeine levels and overlooked stimulants in energy drinks may strain the heart and elevate stroke risk.
Ghost Particle Interaction Captured for the First Time Deep Underground Discover Mag Par :Anastasia Scott 10 décembre 2025 à 23:20 Learn how a particle born in the sun’s core left a measurable flash of light two kilometers beneath Earth’s surface.
2,400-Year-Old War Vessel in Denmark Reveals Rare Fingerprint and New Origin Story Discover Mag Par :Anastasia Scott 10 décembre 2025 à 20:00 Learn how chemical signatures in the Hjortspring boat’s caulking pointed researchers toward its Baltic origins.
Sperm Whale Clicks May Be More Complex Than Once Thought, and Similar to Human Language Discover Mag Par :Avery Hurt 10 décembre 2025 à 17:45 Learn how new discoveries about whale language also raise ethical and legal questions.
Humans May Be More Monogamous Than Meerkats, But Beavers Have Us Beat Discover Mag Par :Sam Walters 10 décembre 2025 à 16:15 Learn more about mammal monogamy rates, which support the theory that the primary mating pattern in Homo sapiens is monogamy.
Asteroid Bennu Samples Carry Mysterious Space Gum, Sugars, and a Ton of Stardust Discover Mag Par :Jack Knudson 10 décembre 2025 à 00:10 Learn about the molecules and materials found in samples of asteroid Bennu, including sugars, space gum, and an abundance of stardust.
A 2,000-Year-Old Pleasure Barge Resurfaces in Cleopatra’s Harbor, Telling Us of Life in Roman Egypt Discover Mag Par :Jenny Lehmann 10 décembre 2025 à 00:05 Discover an ancient luxury shipwreck, complete with Greek graffiti, offering a rare glimpse into elite life on Alexandria’s waterways.
4,000-Year-Old Sheep Bone Shows Evidence of the Plague, a First Case Beyond Humans Discover Mag Par :Stephanie Edwards 9 décembre 2025 à 23:45 Learn about the first evidence of the Bronze Age plague in a non-human host, found in a sheep bone from Russia.
The Early Human Hobbit Vanished 61,000 Years Ago — And Climate Change May Be to Blame Discover Mag Par :Anastasia Scott 9 décembre 2025 à 23:30 Learn how a major shift toward drought reshaped the Flores ecosystem and may have driven the hobbits to extinction.
Supermassive Black Hole Flare Launched Wind and Debris Into Space at 37,000 Miles Per Second Discover Mag Par :Monica Cull 9 décembre 2025 à 23:00 Learn more about the supermassive black hole in galaxy NGC 3783 and how its powerful blast is similar to our sun’s coronal mass ejections.
Bonobos Send the Noisiest Fertility Signal in Primates — Males Still Have to Decode It Discover Mag Par :Anastasia Scott 9 décembre 2025 à 22:30 Learn how male bonobos use subtle behavioral and reproductive cues to pinpoint the fertile window, even when the usual swelling signal gives them almost no useful information.