Top Hackernews posts from www.nationalgeographic.com
- Time-lapse of a single cell transforming into a salamander (2019) (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Sperm counts worldwide are plummeting faster than we thought (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- We haven’t seen a quarter of known bee species since the 1990s (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- U.S. generates more plastic trash than any other nation, report finds (2020) (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Chinese paddlefish, one of the world's largest fish, declared extinct (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Fruits and vegetables are less nutritious than they used to be (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Some fish live beyond 100 and get healthier as they age (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- To regrow forests the U.S. needs billions of seeds–and many more 'seed hunters' (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Venus is volcanically alive, new find shows (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Silphion: a miracle plant thought to be eaten into extinction 2k years ago (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- A small, delayed avalanche may have been responsible for the Dyatlov Incident (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- The Universe Is Expanding Faster Than It Should Be (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Fake animal rescue videos have become a new frontier for animal abuse (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Demand for ornamental plants is ravaging South Africa’s rare desert flora (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- The Kissimmee River has been brought back to life, and wildlife is thriving (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- ‘Dragon Man’ skull may be new species, shaking up human family tree (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Map shows how fertilizer is choking the Great Lakes (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- They spent 12 years solving a puzzle. It yielded the first Covid-19 vaccines (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Enormous ‘rogue waves’ can appear out of nowhere (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Is algae the new kale? (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Rare chunks of Earth's mantle found exposed in Maryland (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Was cancer less likely in a pre-industrial world? (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Remembering the night two atomic bombs fell on North Carolina (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Could seaweed be the 'fastest and least expensive' tool to fight climate change? (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Mind-controlling parasite makes hyena cubs more reckless around lions (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- The quest to make a 'contagious' animal vaccine (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- The U.S. set off a nuclear bomb in space in 1962 (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- New Orleans levees passed their first major test (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- National Geographic now recognizes The Southern Ocean (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Insect Has Gears in Its Legs (2013) (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Origami is yielding new applications in spacecraft, architecture, and medicine (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Orcas found to kill blue whales (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- How sugar and fat affect your brain (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- 22 Discoveries of 2022 (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Paul Theroux reflects on the evolving nature of rail travel (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Ismail al-Jazari – the medieval 'Father of Robotics' (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- 890M-year-old sponge fossil may be the earliest animal yet found (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- A deceptively simple plan to replenish California’s groundwater (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Many women struggle to breastfeed. Scientists are starting to ask why (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Sama-Bajau “sea nomads” people gene mutations allow them to free-dive 13 minutes (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Pictures reveal the isolated lives of Japan’s social recluses (2018) (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- A little-known shipwreck that inspired ‘Dracula’ (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Today's 5-year-olds will likely live to 100 (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Ancient DNA may reveal origin of the Philistines (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- The conspiracy to kill Julius Caesar (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- For insects, the Amazon’s canopy contains a dazzling multiverse (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Amazonian moths that drink the tears of sleeping birds (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- A pharaoh with 100 children bungled his succession (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- The Mediterranean diet works (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Deepest Dive Under Antarctica Reveals a Vibrant World (2017) (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Experimental archaeologist tested out Stone-Age living on the Thames (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Gold Grows On Eucalyptus Trees (2013) (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Accidental implosion yields new measurement for ocean's deepest point (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- The volcanic explosion in Tonga destroyed an island and created many mysteries (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Alien hunters have spent 60 years finding new solutions for the Drake Equation (www.nationalgeographic.com)
- Why heart attacks are rising in young adults and what to watch out for (www.nationalgeographic.com)