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How to attract hummingbirds to your yard

Popular Science

Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. It's tempting to think attracting them is as simple as hanging a bright red feeder and calling it a day. But there's more to drawing these tiny visitors than most people realize. What brings them in and keeps them coming back comes down to the bigger picture happening in your yard. Hummingbirds often return to the same area where they hatched to feed, nest, and raise the next generation.

  Industry: Media > Photography (0.34)

Wild bobcat making remarkable recovery after getting hit by car

Popular Science

Two orthopedic surgeons and one four hour surgery later, the young feline is on the mend. The surgery to heal the injured wildcat took four hours. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. In February, Tracie Young, director of the Raven Ridge Wildlife Center in Pennsylvania, received an unforgettable phone call. A game warden asked if the center in southeastern Pennsylvania had room for a bobcat that had been hit and dragged by a car.


28 powerful Sony World Photography Awards 2026 honorees

Popular Science

Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. In the Congo Basin, two groups of wild western lowland gorillas encounter photographer Hugo Hebbe. One group is familiar with humans, reacting with indifference to the attention. The other remains cautious, scamping off when humans approach. The images captured during the encounter (seen below) document "an evolving story of fear, patience and trust," the photographer explains.


The most eco-friendly burial option isn't cremation or human composting

Popular Science

Science Ask Us Anything The most eco-friendly burial option isn't cremation or human composting With more options than ever, we break down which one's best for the planet. Cemeteries are increasingly running out of space. Are there greener options we ought to turn to? Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. Perhaps one of life's hardest tasks is deciding what to do with a loved one's--or even your own--bodily remains. Do you go the cremation route? If you want your last act on Earth to also be good for the Earth, what do you do?


Longest snake ever measured is over 23.5 feet long

Popular Science

Environment Animals Wildlife Endangered Species Longest snake ever measured is over 23.5 feet long Nicknamed the'Baroness,' this python is longer than two great white sharks. The Baroness may be as much as 10 percent longer than initially measured. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. A snake in southwest Indonesia has shattered the Guinness World Record for the longest serpent ever spotted in the wild. Nicknamed "Ibu Baron" (the Baroness), the giant female reticulated python () discovered in late 2025 measures 23-feet-and-8-inches from head to tail--about the same length as a regulation soccer goal.


Ancient Mayan water filters stopped a lot--just not mercury poisoning

Popular Science

The civilization made the most of its technology, but everything has its limits. Mayan society often relied on cinnabar, a deep red pigment that got its hue from mercury sulfide. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. A trio of ancient reservoirs in present-day Guatemala is revealing both the strength--and limitations--of Mayan water science. While the civilization's purification techniques resulted in comparatively clean drinking sources, archaeologists say the unknowable consequences of a commonly used, deep-red pigment consistently subjected the Indigenous population to toxic mercury poisoning .


163 surrendered rats seek new homes in Massachusetts

Popular Science

'Rats have a bad reputation, but they actually make really great companion pets.' Rats are much more clean than their reputation suggests. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. A non-profit organization in Massachusetts received a boatload of pet rats in need of new homes. An individual in northeastern Massachusetts surrendered 163 rats in early February. That's almost 60 percent more than the total number of rats that were adopted from the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals-Angell (MSPCA-Angell) in 2025 alone.


On's new LightSpray CloudMonster 3 Hyper running shoe is built by robots in 3 minutes flat

Popular Science

Gear Fitness Gear On's new LightSpray CloudMonster 3 Hyper running shoe is built by robots in 3 minutes flat The On LightSpray Cloudmonster 3 Hyper running shoe relies on a clever automated production process that makes a lighter, more comfortable sneaker. The LightSpray tech creates a unique upper. We may earn revenue from the products available on this page and participate in affiliate programs. Building a running shoe is, by any reasonable measure, an absurdly complicated process. A conventional pair involves somewhere in the neighborhood of 200 individual manufacturing steps -- cutting fabric panels, stitching seams, gluing layers, trimming edges -- typically spread across multiple factories and dozens of human hands.


During WWI, a daredevil pilot helped invent the first 'drones'

Popular Science

During WWI, a daredevil pilot helped invent the first'drones' Lawrence Sperry's autopilot proved planes could fly themselves. Lawrence Sperry was a pioneer, a showman, and inventor. Without him, flying today would look very different. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. On November 21, 1916, pilot and inventor Lawrence Sperry was flying over Long Island's Great South Bay with his student Dorothy Rice Pierce when his plane suddenly plunged into the water .


Japan eyes distant island for nuclear waste dump

Popular Science

Minamitorishima is nearly 1,250 miles east of Tokyo. The island is surrounded by a coral atoll and is only 0.6 miles wide. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. Nuclear power is on the rise around the world, but with it comes an extremely pressing question: where will all of the radioactive waste be stored? For Japan, one answer may lie in literally the most remote location at their disposal.