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Record Lightning Storm, Recreating Illusions, How Dogs See, and More

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The latest from The Porthole and the wider world of science. | Did a friend forward this? This Tuesd

The latest from The Porthole and the wider world of science. [View in browser](| [Join Nautilus]( Did a friend forward this? [Subscribe here.]( This Tuesday, check out the top science news—and the latest short sharp looks at science from The Porthole [READ NAUTILUS]( DISCOVERIES The Top Science News This Week [Bacteria from the Microbiomes of Farmed Pigs Could Cross Over to Us]( Understanding how diverse Streptococcus suis is in the global pig livestock population will help researchers come up with strategies to ease its potential impact on human health. [PNAS→]( [Scientists Recreate Illusory Visual Experiences from Brain Activity]( What our mind’s eye can see is becoming less inherently private. [Science Advances→]( [The Way Dogs See the World]( “Smarter” dogs hang tough when learning something hard and can overcome their biases. [EurekAlert!→]( [A 44-Million Year Old Grasshopper Was Found Preserved in Amber]( Researchers inspected its ear, finding it could hear in ultrasound and could listen to bats echolocating. [Cell Press→]( [How Ukraine Sunk a Russian Warship It Shouldn’t Have Been Able to See]( The Moskva warship was out of Ukrainian radar range—but weird weather conditions. [American Meteorological Society→]( [A 2022 Volcanic Eruption Created the Most Intense Lightning Storm Ever Recorded]( The lightning flashes expanded outward in a pattern of donut-shaped rings. [Communications Earth & Environment→]( [Mystery of Missing WW2 Pilot Solved by Cranfield Scientists]( Eight decades after 2nd Lt. Gilbert Haldeen Myers’ plane crashed, researchers identified the Pittsburgh native’s remains in Italy. [BBC News→]( [How an Entire Continent Went Missing]( But scientists have found it again. [Big Think→]( [In Need of Some Positive Climate Stories?]( Are you looking for a newsletter packed with inspiration and solutions on how to live a more sustainable life? Every two weeks, we give you all that in stories right at the intersection of current culture and climate. [Join us]( and over 40,000 optimists today in creating a future we all want to live in tomorrow. [SIGN UP HERE]( From The Porthole—short sharp looks at science [PSYCHOLOGY]( [The Virtues of Not Knowing]( How relishing uncertainty can make us better thinkers and neighbors. BY MAGGIE JACKSON I am going to show you some pictures. Tell me whether each is more like a dog or a cat.” With these brief instructions, a pioneering University of California, Berkeley psychologist began giving people so-called tests of perception that were in fact extraordinary barometers of their capacity to relish the twists and turns of life. [Keep on reading]( More stories from Nautilus [ARTS]( [What Should We Do With an Old Sea Shanty?]( Grappling with the complicated legacy of an unexpectedly popular musical genre. BY KATY KELLEHER[Continue reading →]( [EVOLUTION]( [My 3 Greatest Revelations]( Joseph LeDoux on writing his new book, The Four Realms of Existence: A New Theory of Being Human. BY JOSEPH LEDOUX[Continue reading →]( [ZOOLOGY]( [Nature’s Invisibility Cloak]( Meet the sea creatures with real powers to go unseen. BY EDWIN BARKDOLL The lure of invisibility has captivated humans for millennia. [Continue reading for free→]( EXCLUSIVE MEMBER CONTENT | [Explore Memberships→]( [Enjoy Black Friday Early—Get 25% Off a Nautilus Membership]( [Join for unlimited, ad-free access]( to Nautilus’ unique brand of science journalism. [JOIN NOW]( P.S. The French Enlightenment philosopher Voltaire was born on this day in 1694. He popularized Isaac Newton’s work in physics, the Principia, writing, with his coauthor Émilie du Châtelet, the accessible book Elements of the Philosophy of Newton. “It’s an amusing, if perhaps horrifying, thought experiment to imagine Principia showing up on Amazon today and running the gauntlet of the comment system,” [wrote]( Caleb Scharf. “‘Why is this thing written in Latin?’ ‘It would help if it wasn’t so long.’ ‘I can’t understand this, why are scientists so bad at explaining things?’ ‘I don’t buy this idea of gravity at all, what nonsense!’” 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, [browse our archive]( of past print issues, and inspire a friend to sign up for [the Nautilus newsletter](. [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [Instagram]( Copyright © 2023 NautilusNext, All rights reserved.You were subscribed to the newsletter from [nautil.us](. Our mailing address is: NautilusNext360 W 36th Street, 7S,New York, NY 10018 Don't want to hear from us anymore? [Unsubscribe](

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