The Mouse Trap
How the medical research industry came to almost exclusively use rodents for testing—and the danger that reliance now poses to human health.
How the medical research industry came to almost exclusively use rodents for testing—and the danger that reliance now poses to human health.
Daniel Engber Slate Nov 2011 1h30min Permalink
On the autopsy of a 5,000-year-old murder victim.
Stephen S. Hall National Geographic Nov 2011 Permalink
On killing and eating small game in Seattle.
Brendan Kiley The Stranger Sep 2006 25min Permalink
Irving Kahn is about to celebrate his 106th birthday. He still goes to work every day. Scientists are studying him and several hundred other Ashkenazim to find out what keeps them going. And going. And going.
Jesse Green New York Nov 2011 25min Permalink
A profile of environmental activist Tim DeChristopher.
Abe Streep Outside Nov 2011 25min Permalink
On the battles, both between humans and animals, in Africa’s overpopulated Albertine Rift.
Robert Draper National Geographic Oct 2011 20min Permalink
A universal panic--the spontaneous combustion of women--highlights feminist questions and everyday living.
"The stories kept circulating: a mother of five, sitting on the sidelines of a Little League game, gone. A waitress in our favorite diner, who always remembered that we needed extra napkins, gone. A bank teller we said hello to when we deposited our checks, gone. Who could figure this out, we asked. Who was going to protect us?"
Jessica Forcier New Delta Review Jan 2011 Permalink
Retirement for chimps is, in its way, a perversely natural outcome, which is to say, one that only we, the most cranially endowed of the primates, could have possibly concocted. It's the final manifestation of the irrepressible and ultimately vain human impulse to bring inside the very walls that we erect against the wilderness its most inspiring representatives -- the chimps, our closest biological kin, the animal whose startling resemblance to us, both outward and inward, has long made it a ''can't miss'' for movies and Super Bowl commercials and a ''must have'' in our laboratories. Retirement homes are, in a sense, where we've been trying to get chimps all along: right next door.
Charles Siebert New York Times Magazine Jul 2005 30min Permalink
Fourteen other tornadoes hit Georgia on April 27 and 28. This was not the record — that would be twenty, during Tropical Storm Alberto in 1994. But it was one of the worst twenty-four-hour periods in the history of the state. Tornadoes hit Trenton, Cherokee Valley, south of LaGrange, and Covington; killed seven people in a neighborhood in Catoosa County, swept through Ringgold, and killed two more — a disabled man and his caregiver — in a double-wide trailer on the far end of Spalding County. Those tornadoes got all the attention. The Vaughn tornado didn’t even warrant an article in a major newspaper. No one talked about Vaughn. The only way for a person to really find out about it was to drive past.
Justin Heckert Atlanta Magazine Oct 2011 Permalink
The case against agriculture.
Jared Diamond Discover May 1987 Permalink
Bets are placed on the developments and historical events of the future universe.
"I got much more satisfaction, however, from the bets we had to bear in mind for billions and billions of years, without forgetting what we had bet on, and remembering the shorter-term bets at the same time, and the number (the era of whole numbers had begun, and this complicated matters a bit) of bets each of us had won, the sum of the stakes (my advantage kept growing; the Dean was up to his ears in debt). And in addition to all this I had to dream up new bets, further and further ahead in the chain of my deductions."
Italo Calvino Jan 1965 10min Permalink
A quiet young woman's trip to the seashore yields a plethora of observations.
"Eventually her muscles warmed and Magritte felt slick and alive in the liquid sea. She turned over on her back, paddling lazily, and watched the movement of the clouds in the sky. The sea gurgled secretively in her ears."
Eileen Chong Quarterly Literary Review Singapore Jan 2010 10min Permalink
A minimalist exchange set inside a volcano.
"There is nothing to do but drink beers and stare up into the black and so that is what we do. "
Catherine Zeidler The Collagist Jan 2011 Permalink
An investigation into The End.
Tom Bissell Harper's Feb 2003 45min Permalink
The disappearance of a legendary scavenger could have dire consequences for a swelling human population.
Meera Subramanian The Virginia Quarterly Review Jul 2011 30min Permalink
A trip to the Cannabis Cup serves as a backdrop for the story of how the War on Drugs revolutionized the way marijuana is cultivated in America.
Michael Pollan New York Times Magazine Feb 1995 30min Permalink
A cultural history of feral swine.
Ian Frazier New Yorker Dec 2005 40min Permalink
The discovery of 30,000-year old, perfectly preserved cave paintings in southern France offer a glimpse into a world that 21st-century humans can never hope to understand. The article that inspired Werner Herzog’s “Cave of Forgotten Dreams.”
Judith Thurman New Yorker Jun 2008 30min Permalink
How the tapping of Angola’s natural resources has kept the country a killing field, and made it one of the world’s most glaringly inefficient kleptocracies.
Scott Johnson Guernica Apr 2011 25min Permalink
On BP’s actions after the oil spill.
Raffi Khatchadourian New Yorker Mar 2011 1h10min Permalink
In 1962, Siffre spent two months living in total isolation in a subterranean cave, without access to clock, calendar, or sun. Sleeping and eating only when his body told him to, his goal was to discover how the natural rhythms of human life would be affected by living “beyond time.”
Joshua Foer Cabinet Jun 2008 10min Permalink
Best Article Crime History Science
In the 1880’s, a shabbily dressed man popped up in numerous America cities, calling upon local scientists, showing letters of introduction claiming he was a noted geologist or paleontologist, discussing both fields at a staggeringly accomplished level, and then making off with valuable books or cash loans.
- Skulls in the Stars Feb 2011 30min Permalink
Twenty-five years later, inside the Exclusion Zone.
Henry Shukman Outside Mar 2011 25min Permalink
The search for the genetic distinction that allows certain animals, humans included, to be domesticated.
Evan Ratliff National Geographic Mar 2011 20min Permalink
What happened when the founder of North Face and Esprit bought a chunk of Chile the size of a small state, intending to live with a select group inside it and turn it case study for ecological preservation. It turned out, however, that Chileans didn’t really like that idea.
William Langewiesche The Atlantic Jun 1999 20min Permalink