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Did a friend forward this? Sign up here Together with: Hello Nautilus readers, and thanks for spending part of your Sunday with us. Today we see what Earth’s meteorology can teach us about why Jupiter’s Great Red Spot is shrinking. Plus, a new way to treat venomous snake bites, listen to a stunning oratorio written by a world-famous geneticist that was her answer to Haydn's The Creation, and more. Check out today’s free story on predicting earthquakes below. Enjoy your weekend! — Liz Greene The latest from Nautilus Jupiter’s Incredible Shrinking Spot Earth’s meteorology could explain what’s behind the great red whorl’s waning. [Continue Reading→]( A Snaky Use for CRISPR Indiana Jones would love to hear about this new application for the gene-editing technology. [Continue Reading→]( When the Composer Is a Geneticist Jenny Graves tired of singing about Adam and Eve. So she wrote a creation oratorio based on science. [Continue Reading→]( Don’t limit your curiosity.
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Nautilus readers get 30% off their 1st shipment for the next 24 hours. Use code NAUT30. [Try Bamboo]( *Thank you for supporting our sponsors. The best things we learned today - Jupiter’s Great Red Spot was once measured at to be least 25,000 miles wide (more than three times the diameter of Earth). [Read on Nautilus→](
- Captive chimpanzees can learn to say the human word, “Mama.” [Read on The New York Times→](
- A common blood-thinning medication might be able to treat deadly snake bites onsite. [Read on Nautilus→](
- The Irminger Sea, a small patch of water in the North Atlantic Ocean, does not appear to be warming like the rest of the ocean—which could foretell a huge disruption to the ocean’s main current system. [Read on Wired→](
- High temperatures can reverse the sex of the bearded dragon. [Read on Nautilus→]( “Planets anything like Earth are exceedingly scarce in the cosmos. That message should give pause to anyone who imagines that we might 'terraform' another planet in a matter of a few human generations.” — Marcia Bjornerud, a geoscientist, explains how geology can better inform our estimates of the habitability of other planets. [Read on Nautilus→]( Take an Ethereal Trip Through the Cosmos You can now [watch]( or [listen]( to indie folk rocker Marissa Nadler read “A Cosmic Glitch in Gravity” on [YouTube]( or [Spotify](. [Watch]( [Listen]( Today’s unlocked free story ENVIRONMENT
A New Way to Predict Earthquakes
Using geometry to figure out where the next big one will strike.
BY LISA S. GARDINER Picture a fault line, like the San Andreas fault, and you might imagine a perfect slice through rock, like a cut through a cake with a sharp knife. [Continue reading]( P.S. One of the worst earthquakes in modern history occurred on July 28, 1976, in Tangshan, China. It’s estimated that 242,000 people in and near Tangshan were killed, making the earthquake one of the deadliest in recorded history. Now, geophysicists are using geometry in a new way to predict when and where earthquakes will occur. “How much a fault line zigs, zags, undulates, and branches may play a major role in how earthquakes occur,” says Lisa S. Gardiner in her Nautilus article, “[A New Way to Predict Earthquakes](.” Thanks for reading! What did you think of today's note? Inspire a friend to [sign up for the Nautilus newsletter](. Copyright © 2024 NautilusNext, All rights reserved.
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