Sid Perkins
Sid Perkins is a freelance science writer based in Crossville, Tenn.
 
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All Stories by Sid Perkins
- 			 Planetary Science Planetary ScienceFlashes in Venus’ atmosphere might be meteors, not lightningWith upcoming missions planned for Venus, scientists are eager to figure out the origin of the mysterious flashes. 
- 			 Planetary Science Planetary ScienceNASA’s DART mission lofted a swarm of boulders into spaceHubble telescope images of the asteroid Dimorphos reveal a halo of 37 dim, newfound objects — most likely boulders shaken loose from the surface. 
- 			 Science & Society Science & SocietyHumans exploit about one-third of wild vertebrate speciesAn analysis of nearly 47,000 vertebrate animal species reveals that using them for food, medicine or the pet trade is helping push some toward extinction. 
- 			 Earth EarthIrrigation may be shifting Earth’s rotational axisComputer simulations suggest that from 1993 to 2010 irrigation alone could have nudged the North Pole by about 78 centimeters. 
- 			 Climate ClimateWhy is the North Atlantic breaking heat records?Record-breaking sea-surface temperatures off the coast of Africa may affect the 2023 hurricane season. What’s fueling the unusual heat is unclear. 
- 			 Anthropology AnthropologyThese ancient flutes may have been used to lure falconsSeven bird-bone flutes unearthed from a site in northern Israel are about 12,000 years old and may have been used as bird calls. 
- 			  New discoveries are bringing the world of pterosaurs to lifeThe latest clues hint at where pterosaurs — the first vertebrates to fly — came from, how they evolved, what they ate and more. 
- 			 Climate ClimateThe summer of 2021 was the Pacific Northwest’s hottest in a millenniumTree ring data from the Pacific Northwest reveal that the region’s average summer temperature in 2021 was the highest since at least the year 950. 
- 			 Paleontology PaleontologyNewfound bat skeletons are the oldest on recordThe newly identified species Icaronycteris gunnelli lived about 52.5 million years ago in what is now Wyoming and looked a lot like modern bats. 
- 			 Astronomy AstronomyThe biggest planet orbiting TRAPPIST-1 doesn’t appear to have an atmosphereTRAPPIST-1b is hotter than astronomers expected, suggesting there’s no atmosphere to transport heat around the planet. 
- 			 Paleontology Paleontology520-million-year-old animal fossils might not be animals after allNewly described fossils of Protomelission gatehousei suggest that the species, once thought to be the oldest example of bryozoans, is actually a type of colony-forming algae. 
- 			 Paleontology PaleontologyThe oldest known pollen-carrying insects lived about 280 million years agoPollen stuck to fossils of earwig-like Tillyardembia pushes back the earliest record of potential insect pollinators by about 120 million years.