What’s new and popular this week in Nautilus. [View in browser](| [Join Nautilus]( EDITORS' CHOICE Together with Did a friend forward this? [Subscribe here.]( This Sunday, read the latest and most popular stories from Nautilus—plus your free story of the day below [GEOSCIENCE]( [Do Our Oceans Feel the Tug of Mars?]( Ancient currents seemed to move in concert with a 2.4 million-year dance between the Red Planet and Earth. BY MARCIA BJORNERUD Well into the space age, our thinking about the heavens is still entangled with ideas from ancient Greece.
[Continue reading →]( WE ARE CURIOUS TO KNOW... What are the best and worst things you’ve ever tasted? Let us know! Reply to this newsletter with your response, briefly explaining your choice, and we’ll reveal the top answers. (This question was inspired by [“How to Tell If You’re a Supertaster.”](). Top Answers to Our Previous Question
(On One Thing You Share a Love for with a Friend) • Comic books and comic book artwork. – Steven W. ADVERTISEMENT Convenient Composting, Right on Your Counter Composting food waste is a great way to reduce your carbon footprint, but it can be difficult to get started. Lomi makes it easy. With the [Lomi smart kitchen composter](, you can turn your food scraps into high-quality dirt ready for your potted plants or garden—all at the touch of a button. Food waste goes in. Nutrient-rich soil comes out. It’s that simple. [Get your Lomi for 24% off for a limited time.]( [BUY ON AMAZON]( Popular This Week [ENVIRONMENT]( [What Happens to Google Maps When Tectonic Plates Move?]( Earth’s tremors can tweak your GPS coordinates. BY GEORGE MUSSER
[Continue reading →]( [HEALTH]( [How to Tell If You’re a Supertaster]( For one thing, you won’t like IPAs. BY ROB DESALLE
[Continue reading →]( The latest from Nautilus [ARTS]( [When Bacteria Are Beautiful]( Making art out of an invisible world that shapes human health and disease. BY KRISTEN FRENCH
[Continue reading →]( [ENVIRONMENT]( [How Much Carbon Can a Tree Really Store?]( A new study says climate change is messing with the math. BY ELENA KAZAMIA
[Continue reading →]( No One Likes Paper Straws These sweet-smelling [sugarcane straws]( are completely biodegradable and, unlike paper straws, they can last all day without getting soggy. [BUY ON AMAZON]( Your free story this Sunday! [PHYSICS]( [The Loneliest Genius]( Isaac Newton spurned social contact but also relied on it for his greatest work. BY LEONARD MLODINOW Describing his life, shortly before his death, Newton put his contributions this way: “I don’t know what I may seem to the world, but, as to myself, I seem to have been only like a boy playing on the sea shore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay undiscovered before me.”
[Continue reading for free→]( Want to Fight Climate Change? Waste Less Food Doing something about the climate crisis can feel overwhelming, especially for an ordinary person. Luckily, there’s something that we all can do to make a real difference: waste less food. Food overproduction uses up a lot of energy and rotting food generates greenhouse gasses. To help with this crisis, our partners at One5C have written a deeply sourced guide to everything you need to know about food waste. From the big picture to the shopping, food storage, and cooking tips, [One5C]( has you covered. Check it out by following the link below. [READ IT HERE]( P.S. The 17th-century English scientist, mathematician, and theologian Isaac Newton died on this day in 1727. “His life did not include many friends, or family he felt close to, or even a single lover, for, at least until his later years, getting Newton to socialize was something like convincing cats to gather for a game of Scrabble,” wrote Leonard Mlodinow. “Perhaps most telling was a remark by a distant relative, Humphrey Newton, who served as his assistant for five years: he saw Newton laugh only once—when someone asked him why anyone would want to study Euclid.” But no one can deny the force of his impact. “Today we all reason like Newtonians,” wrote Mlodinow. [“Even those who know nothing of Newton’s laws have had their psyches steeped in his ideas.”]( Today’s newsletter was written by Brian Gallagher Thanks for reading. [Tell us](mailto:brian.gallagher@nautil.us?subject=&body=) your thoughts on today’s note. Plus, if you find our content valuable, consider [becoming a member]( to support our work, and inspire a friend to sign up for [the Nautilus newsletter](. [Facebook](
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