Miami Underwater
South Florida and the danger of the rising sea.
South Florida and the danger of the rising sea.
Elizabeth Kolbert New Yorker Dec 2015 25min Permalink
On the unexpected longevity of a very strange theory.
Veronique Greenwood Nautilus May 2015 15min Permalink
In search of Ramanujan in India.
Robert Schneider, Bejamin Phelan The Believer Jan 2015 35min Permalink
Uncovering the true identity of Satoshi Nakamoto, the pseudonymous creator of Bitcoin.
Sam Biddle, Andy Cush Gizmodo Nov 2015 15min Permalink
On the slow death of a beached humpback whale.
Rebecca Giggs Granta Nov 2015 15min Permalink
Websites and apps are designed for compulsion, even addiction. So why aren’t they regulated like drugs or casinos?
Michael Schulson Aeon Nov 2015 15min Permalink
Will artificial intelligence bring utopia or destruction?
Raffi Khatchadourian New Yorker Nov 2015 50min Permalink
Bomb makers—including ISIS—have been on a quest to obtain red mercury, a weapon reputed to be powerful enough to “create the city-flattening blast of a nuclear bomb.” They haven’t found it yet. That might be because it doesn’t exist.
C.J. Chivers New York Times Magazine Nov 2015 20min Permalink
It’s highly unlikely that a gigantic space rock will crash through our atmosphere and destroy civilization as we know it. But it’s not impossible either. Which is why a small but growing community of scientists and astronomers are scrambling to spot and destroy dangerous asteroids long before they hit us.
Josh Dean Popular Mechanics Nov 2015 55min Permalink
The story of a transplant from a 26-year-old bike mechanic to a 41-year-old fireman with severe burns.
Steve Fishman New York Nov 2015 20min Permalink
How English became the weirdest major language in modern use.
John McWhorter Aeon Nov 2015 15min Permalink
“As the world’s best-known oceanographer—Sylvia is to our era what Jacques Cousteau was to an earlier one—she feels a heavy responsibility. In her lifetime, she has seen the ocean damaged in ways humans never thought it could be. The ongoing disaster leaves her mournful, desolate, and sometimes scary to talk to. Since her first dive, in a sponge-diver’s helmet in a Florida river when she was 16, she has spent 7,000 hours, or the better part of a year, underwater.”
Ian Frazier Outside Nov 2015 30min Permalink
As the birds decline, one Icelandic island keeps throwing a rowdy, boozy puffin festival.
Brian Kevin Audubon Nov 2015 15min Permalink
When they go to bed tonight, white people will be five times likelier to get a good night’s sleep than African-Americans.
Brian Resnick National Journal Oct 2015 25min Permalink
On the gender gap in diagnosis and treatment of autism.
Apoorva Mandavilli Spectrum Oct 2015 Permalink
She told the family of a severely disabled man that she could help him to communicate with the outside world. Then she said they were in love.
Daniel Engber New York Times Magazine Oct 2015 20min Permalink
On the ground with a young Texas doctor who travels the state to provide abortions.
Irin Carmon MSNBC Oct 2015 Permalink
The real Henry David Thoreau.
Kathryn Schulz New Yorker Oct 2015 25min Permalink
America’s devastating treatment of schizophrenia.
Jonathan Cohn Huffington Post Highline Oct 2015 25min Permalink
The history of canis lupus in America, up to the present day.
Jason Mark Scientific American Oct 2015 55min Permalink
The frustrated – and well-hidden – story of Isabel Myers Briggs, inventor of the famous personality test.
Merve Emre Digg Oct 2015 35min Permalink
An oral history of the disaster:
Someone said to me, or maybe I read it, that the problem of Chernobyl presents itself first of all as a problem of self understanding. That seemed right. I keep waiting for someone intelligent to explain it to me.
Svetlana Alexievich n+1 Oct 2015 15min Permalink
The art and science (or lack thereof) of water dowsing.
Lois Parshley Aeon Oct 2015 15min Permalink
Dolphins may have the capacity for mourning, and elephants sometimes bury their dead.
Tim Flannery New York Review of Books Oct 2015 15min Permalink
Dr. Joel Dreyer was a respected psychiatrist. Then he took a sudden turn to a life of drug dealing. Medicine might be able to explain why.
Erika Hayasaki California Sunday Sep 2015 20min Permalink