Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Far too often, women like them are overlooked, overworked and underpaid. These are the stories of women — past and present — who have made critical contributions to science.
Discover the latest breaking news in the U.S. and around the world — politics, weather, entertainment, lifestyle, finance, sports and much more.
From UFOs and flying snakes to smoke from Canadian wildfires bathing U.S. cities in a postapocalyptic glow, 2023 had more than its share of weird news.Here are just some of the strange things that ...
Get breaking news and the latest headlines on business, entertainment, politics, world news, tech, sports, videos and much more from AOL
AOL latest headlines, entertainment, sports, articles for business, health and world news.
She has written for The Daily Beast, National Geographic, Discovery News, Scientific American, Ars Technica, and Al Jazeera English. [6] [7] Teitel's first book was based on research for her master's degree thesis. Breaking the Chains of Gravity (2015) tells the story of America's nascent space program.
During her time as a researcher Aschwanden discovered the popular-science magazine New Scientist and decided that she would like to be a science journalist. [3] She attended a science writing workshop in Santa Fe in 1996. [4] She eventually studied science communication at University of California, Santa Cruz and graduated in 1998. [5]
Nobel Prize meets Weird Science. Result: Award-winning papers like "Injuries Due to Falling Coconuts" and "Chickens Prefer Beautiful Humans". Nylon-eating bacteria and creationism: The intersection of science and religion in a simple bacterium. 'Pataphysics: A parody of science that purports to study what lies beyond the realm of metaphysics.