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Did a friend forward this? Sign up here Hello there Nautilus readers, and thanks for stopping by. Today we follow scientists on the trail of elusive pregnant sharks to find out where baby sharks come from. Plus, new evidence that our morals might not be quite so steadfast as weâd like to thinkâand might fluctuate with the seasons. And in the news: a clear look at the surface of Mercury, bees in a heat wave, and more. Donât forget to check out todayâs free story, on the team that found the Higgs boson, below.
â Liz Greene The latest from Nautilus How to Find Baby Sharks Where do shark moms give birth? Remarkably, scientists are just figuring it out. [Continue Readingâ]( Our Morals Change with the Seasons How our sense of whatâs right and wrong fluctuates through the year. [Continue Readingâ]( Donât limit your curiosity.
Enjoy unlimited ad-free Nautilus stories every month for less than $5/month. [Join now]( Get a Limited-Edition Nautilus Reali-Tee Shirt! To mark the launch of our Reality Issue, Nautilus collaborated with French designer Mathieu Courbier of Almost Free Services to create a chic [reality-themed t-shirt]( (modeled above by UCLA Associate Professor of Philosophy Josh Armstrong). âThe question of ârealityâ is a complicated one.â Courbier told us. âDepending on science or philosophy or art, the definition of reality can start with the idea of an object, or by the object itself.â You can get your very own limited edition [Reali-Tee Shirt]( for only $40 while supplies last. Who knew the fabric of reality could be so comfortable? [Buy now]( The top science news this week ⢠The first clear view of Mercuryâs south pole, in all its speckled, cratered glory, has been sent back to Earth by BepiColombo, a spacecraft operated by the European Space Agency and Japan. [Read on The New York Timesâ](
⢠Messenger RNA might be able to help reprogram terminally ill organsâsuch as livers, kidneys, and heartsâto be functional again. A team at the University of Pittsburgh plans to start a clinical trial next year to test it out in humans. [Read on Wiredâ](
⢠Heat waves drastically reduce bumblebeesâ sense of smell. In a lab experiment, simulated heat waves made it up to 80 percent harder for the bees to detect flowers. [Read on Science Newsâ](
⢠A mass death of bats in New England has been linked to a higher human infant mortality rate in the area. [Read on Scienceâ](
⢠An existential threat to North American prairies: trees. [Read on Orionâ]( âHis mind does not fill with to-do lists or replay conversations from the day before.â Caitlin L. Chandler takes us into the world of Johannes Schwarz, a modern hermit who lives alone in the Italian Alps, seeking closer contact with the unseen. Schwarz, who is also a priest, lives what he calls a âprayer life.â Gardening as prayer. Lecture notes as prayer. Meditation as prayer. [Read on Nautilusâ]( Find Out Why Mushrooms are Punk Find out why mushrooms are punk in [Mushroom Punks](, a zine/foraging guide by artist and designer Bella Lalonde. Get [your copy]( for just $15. [Buy now]( Today’s unlocked free story PHYSICS
Who Really Found the Higgs Boson
The real genius in the Nobel Prize-winning discovery is not who you think it is.
BY NEAL HARTMAN To those who say that there is no room for genius in modern science because everything has been discovered, Fabiola Gianotti has a sharp reply. [Continue reading]( P.S. The CERN Large Hadron Collider was turned on for the first time on this day in 2008. And in 2012, physicists discovered the Higgs bosonâbut that experiment required [a whole team of scientists](. The complex nature of the collider means that instead of one mad genius hypothesizing in a room alone, science is shifting toward teams of different kinds of scientists, all with their own special genius. 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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