Goto

Collaborating Authors

 permanent daylight


BOOM! That time Oregon blew up a whale with dynamite.

Popular Science

That time Oregon blew up a whale with dynamite. And why we should never do it again. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent every weekday. When a whale dies in the ocean, an ecosystem grows around its sunken carcass. It's an epic burial at sea, something researchers call a whale fall .


Andrew Jackson's White House once hosted a cheese feeding frenzy

Popular Science

Andrew Jackson's White House once hosted a cheese feeding frenzy The seventh president's farewell party featured 1,400 pounds of cheddar. In 1835, a New York dairy farmer sent President Andrew Jackson a 1,400-pound cheddar cheese to celebrate the president's second inauguration. Two years later, it was finally eaten. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent every weekday. It's February 1837, and the White House is about to bear witness to one of the greatest feeding frenzies in this nation's proud history of competitive consumption.


The space billboard that nearly happened

Popular Science

How a 1993 plan to launch ads into space turned into a national freakout. In the 1990s, space was for sale. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent every weekday. In 1993, Mike Lawson, an aerospace entrepreneur based in Roswell, Georgia, unveiled his vision for a brave new future of advertising: space billboards. This wasn't a half-baked scheme: Lawson had meticulous plans for a proposed 1996 launch: His team of engineers would shoot a package of tightly-wound mylar into orbit about 180 miles above the Earth.


The U.S. tried permanent daylight saving time--and hated it

Popular Science

The U.S. tried permanent daylight saving time--and hated it In 1974, America set its clocks forward for good in the name of energy savings. Between January and September in 1974, President Richard Nixon made daylight saving time permanent for a brief period. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent every weekday. As fall approaches, so too does the end of daylight savings time (DST). On November 2nd, the hour between 1 a.m. and 2 a.m. will happen twice.


Ending daylight saving time could be better for our health

Popular Science

Sorry, no time policy will make winter days longer. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent every weekday. It's a hot (yet also sleepy) debate that ignites twice a year in the United States: Why are we still changing the clocks? The "spring forward" every March can feel particularly volatile, with research linking that loss of a precious hour of sleep to more heart attacks and fatal car accidents . Now, a new study published today in the journal indicates that sticking with standard time may improve health.