Temporary Disabled. :) please Go back Articles by Colin Schultz | Smithsonian Magazine www.fgks.org » Address: [go: up one dir, main page] Include Form Remove Scripts Accept Cookies Show Images Show Referer Rotate13 Base64 Strip Meta Strip Title Session Cookies Sections Subscribe Renew Shop Subscribe Give a Gift Renew Smart News History Science Innovation Arts & Culture Travel History Archaeology U.S. History World History Video Newsletter Science Human Behavior Mind & Body Our Planet Space Wildlife Newsletter Innovation Innovation for Good Education Energy Health & Medicine Sustainability Technology Video Newsletter Arts & Culture Museum Day Art Books Design Food Music & Film Video Newsletter Travel Africa & the Middle East Asia Pacific Europe Central and South America U.S. & Canada Journeys Newsletter At The Smithsonian Visit Exhibitions New Research Artifacts Curators' Corner Ask Smithsonian Podcasts Voices Newsletter Podcast Photos Photo Contest Instagram Video Original Series Smithsonian Channel Newsletters Shop Colin Schultz Colin Schultz is a freelance science writer and editor based in Toronto, Canada. He blogs for Smart News and contributes to the American Geophysical Union. He has a B.Sc. in physical science and philosophy, and a M.A. in journalism. In Defense of the Blobfish: The 'World's Ugliest Animal' Is Our Fault The distinguished blobfish has been judged unfairly Updated: January 16, 2024 | Originally Published: September 13, 2013 Pedophiles Seem to Make Up a Huge Chunk of Anonymized Web Traffic The bulk of Dark Web traffic seems to flow to child pornography sites January 2, 2015 Ring in 2015 With the Quadrantid Meteor Shower The annual Quadrantid meteor shower peaks this weekend January 2, 2015 We Used to Recycle Drugs From Patients' Urine Penicillin extracted from a patient's urine could be reused January 2, 2015 NASA's Opportunity Rover Has Developed Robot Dementia A problem with Opportunity's hardware means it only has short-term memory December 31, 2014 Big News Stories of 2014 That Aren't Going Away We just have so much to look forward to December 31, 2014 The Science of Why Champagne Pops The American Chemical Society takes a look at the science of champagne December 30, 2014 More Than 3,000 People Have Died of Ebola in the Past Two Months The viral outbreak doesn't appear to be slowing December 30, 2014 Americans 'Returned' Around $3.6 Billion Worth of Stolen Goods This Holiday Season Billions of dollars worth of "gift returns" are actually stolen goods December 30, 2014 2014 Was Actually One of the Safer Years to Fly The year saw a few prominent disasters, but 2014 was, unfortunately, nothing out of the ordinary December 29, 2014 This New Year's Eve, Don't Drink and Walk Staggering home is dangerous, too December 29, 2014 Examining Martian Meteorites, Scientists Think They’ve Found The Red Planet’s Missing Water Mars may have an underground water reservoir December 26, 2014 Repeat a Bit of Regular Speech, And It'll Turn Into a Song Throw it in a loop, and listen to the music December 26, 2014 Scientifically Accurate 'Twinkle Twinkle Little Star' Is Still Charming Stars aren't diamonds at all—they're giant balls of gas December 26, 2014 CBS Executives Thought 'A Charlie Brown Christmas' Would Fail There wasn't much CBS executives liked about the Christmas special December 24, 2014 There’s More to Frankincense and Myrrh Than Meets the Eye Frankincense and myrrh have interesting medicinal properties December 24, 2014 Satellite Photos Show Hundreds of Syrian Heritage Sites Damaged In Ongoing Fighting The new satellite photos show the extent of the damage December 23, 2014 Get Set For Frequent Flooding In Coastal U.S. Cities Sea level rise is increasing the odds of nuisance flooding December 23, 2014 A Bedbug Trap That Might Actually Work Researchers are learning to use bed bugs pheromones against them December 22, 2014 By Keeping Poachers Out, Mine Fields Give Endangered Animals Somewhere to Hide The heavily-mined Iran-Iraq border is a sanctuary for the Persian leopard December 22, 2014 Page 1 of 74 1 2 3 4 5 ... 73 74 Next ›
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Colin Schultz is a freelance science writer and editor based in Toronto, Canada. He blogs for Smart News and contributes to the American Geophysical Union. He has a B.Sc. in physical science and philosophy, and a M.A. in journalism.
The distinguished blobfish has been judged unfairly
Updated: January 16, 2024 | Originally Published: September 13, 2013
The bulk of Dark Web traffic seems to flow to child pornography sites
January 2, 2015
The annual Quadrantid meteor shower peaks this weekend
Penicillin extracted from a patient's urine could be reused
A problem with Opportunity's hardware means it only has short-term memory
December 31, 2014
We just have so much to look forward to
The American Chemical Society takes a look at the science of champagne
December 30, 2014
The viral outbreak doesn't appear to be slowing
Billions of dollars worth of "gift returns" are actually stolen goods
The year saw a few prominent disasters, but 2014 was, unfortunately, nothing out of the ordinary
December 29, 2014
Staggering home is dangerous, too
Mars may have an underground water reservoir
December 26, 2014
Throw it in a loop, and listen to the music
Stars aren't diamonds at all—they're giant balls of gas
There wasn't much CBS executives liked about the Christmas special
December 24, 2014
Frankincense and myrrh have interesting medicinal properties
The new satellite photos show the extent of the damage
December 23, 2014
Sea level rise is increasing the odds of nuisance flooding
Researchers are learning to use bed bugs pheromones against them
December 22, 2014
The heavily-mined Iran-Iraq border is a sanctuary for the Persian leopard
Page 1 of 74