The collapse of our pollinators may no longer be headlines, but weâre still killing their buzz.
June 30, 2022 Did a friend forward this? [Subscribe here](. Dear Nautilus Reader, The buzz about colony collapse disorder may have waned over the last decade. But that doesnât mean the bees are all right. Their predicament is a mystery thatâs never been fully solved. And since 2006, when the first reports of the alarming phenomenon started making headlines, the fate of the bees has not improved. Read what scientists say must be done to [help the crittersâessential to agricultureâthrive](. Robert Frost claims to have written his poem, âStopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening,â in a state of flow. Could it [make you feel the same to read it](? Plus, whatâs going on in our brains when doctors knock us out with general anesthesiaâand how probing the brains of healthy people under sedation can help [unravel the mystery of disorders like coma](. And donât miss this weekâs Facts So Romantic below. [YOU CAN JUMP IN NOW]( [ENVIRONMENT]( [How Are the Bees?]( The collapse of our pollinators may no longer be headlines, but weâre still killing their buzz. BY LOIS PARSHLEY Chelsea Cook grew to love the low hum of the honeybees she studied as a graduate student in Boulder, Colorado. [Continue reading â]( Experience the endless possibilities and deep human connections that science offers [SUBSCRIBE TO NAUTILUS]( [Change the Way You Think About Weight Loss]( Ready to stop dieting? Start [Noom](, the award-winning weight loss program designed to change your mindset so you can get healthyâand stay healthy. Learn how changing your relationship with food and adopting new, healthy habits will help you achieve sustainable lifelong fitness results. [Sign up today]( to get a 7-day free trial! [Start Free Trial]( [ARTS]( [Feeling Stressed? Read a Poem]( The flow of a good poem can synchronize your heart and breath. BY MARISSA GRUNES With their daughter in the hospital suffering from kidney failure, Jonathan Bate and his wife Paula Byrne waited. [Continue reading â]( [NEUROSCIENCE]( [Under Anesthesia, Where Do Our Minds Go?]( To better understand our brains and design safer anesthesia, scientists are turning to EEG. BY JACKIE ROCHELEAU After experimenting on a hen, his dog, his goldfish, and himself, dentist William Morton was ready. [Continue reading â]( [NAUTILUS OCEAN PROMOTION]( [Automatic for the Oceans]( A rock trio on the rise is raising environmental awareness. BY BRIAN GALLAGHER Whatâs enchanting about our oceans is how unexplored they still are, teeming with unknown species. [Read More]( [âIn some of these states of unconsciousness, awareness of the self and the body remains intact.â]( [Jackie Rocheleau catches us up on the "central irony" of anesthesiology.]( [A Newsletter for Realistic Dreamers]( Sign up for the biweekly [5 Letter]( and discover positive solutions, groundbreaking ideas, and real, concrete actions to build a better, more sustainable future together. [Join thousands of readers]( for a thoughtfully curated email every other week. [Sign Up For Free]( FACTS SO ROMANTIC The Best Things We Learned Today Approximately 1 in 1,000 patients who undergo anesthesia report âaccidental awareness,â recalling some experience of their medical procedure. About 50 percent of those patients experience trauma.
[Nautilusâ]( Honeybees regularly fan their wings to control temperature, humidity, and carbon dioxide. But they wonât do it alone. To respond to environmental changes, they need their hive.
[Nautilusâ]( The philosopher J.S. Mill found solace from depression in reading William Wordsworth. Wordsworthâs poems gave Mill âa source of inward joy, of sympathetic and imaginative pleasure, which could be shared in by all human beings.â Cardiologists and psychologists agree!
[Nautilusâ]( A new method of using the gene-editing tool CRISPR could allow scientists to alter lengthy genetic sequences. Like a word processor. âThey actually perform a search and replace function on DNA,â says David Liu, a biologist at Harvard University.
[The New York Timesâ]( "The mass of the Higgs boson of 125 GeV," physicist Frank Close writes in his new book, "turns out to be the precise amount needed to keep the universe on the brink of instability." It's a state Stephen Hawking once warned could one day collapse.
[Elusive: How Peter Higgs Solved the Mystery of Massâ]( OCEAN [Own a Piece of Ocean History]( In honor of the UN Ocean Conference, NautilusThink, the non-profit educational extension of Nautilus Magazine, is auctioning a signed first edition of [Jacques Cousteau's "Whales"](, which is as relevant today as it was three decades ago. The proceeds will be used in support of Nautilus Oceanâs partnership with the UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development and to commission new content for the Nautilus Ocean Channel. Bidding ends on July 10. [Bid Now]( [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [Instagram]( Copyright © 2021 NautilusNext, All rights reserved.
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