Advertisement

Large ships like the one shown here emit low-frequency sounds that may stress out right whales living near busy commercial shipping lanes. Full Story © New England Aquarium
seperator seperator
Wasps airlift annoying ants
In a scrap over food, being big and able to fly is an advantage
A matter of gravity
Map of planetary field is sharpest ever
Brain's mirror system loves the robot
Experiment may suggest why we feel sad for Wall-E
Reader Favorites
seperator
seperator seperator seperator
generic
A Great Aridness: Climate Change and the Future of the American Southwest by William DeBuys
A look at how global warming could affect the American Southwest reveals a landscape in peril. Oxfo...
Buy now | More Books
generic
Memory: Fragments of a Modern History by Alison Winter
With examples from police interrogators to hypnotized housewives, a historian describes changing vie...
Buy now | More Books
seperator

Subscriber Alert

We have been notified that some concerned Science News subscribers have received promotions advertising subscriptions from “Publishers Billing Exchange Inc.,” “Readers Payment Service,” “National Magazine Services,” or “Publishers Periodical Service.” Please disregard these notices. These firms are not authorized agents for Science News or its publisher, Society for Science & the Public. Unfortunately, subscription orders submitted to these subscription agents can not be honored by Science News.

If you received a renewal notice or subscription offer in the mail from someone other than Science News, and have questions concerning your current subscription status, please contact our customer service agents at (800) 552-4412.