Articles - Page 32 of 559

14 min read Planet

Rivers across the Pacific Northwest are missing something critical to how they function, and it’s not water. It’s wood. Fallen trees, root wads, whole logjams. A healthy river in this part of the country was never supposed to be a neat, fast-flowing channel. It was a tangle of downed timber, braided side channels, and seasonal...

15 min read Make

A few dark specks on a sheet, windowsill, or skirting board can make an ordinary room feel suddenly suspect. The reaction is usually immediate and deeply familiar. Disgust arrives first, closely followed by uncertainty. Are those marks nothing more than dust, old grit, or stray insect waste, or do they point to something far more...

11 min read Eat

Aging is a biological inevitability, but the rate and quality of that aging are, surprisingly and rather remarkably, within our own control. For those over the age of 60, nutrition shifts from being about growth and development to being about maintenance, defense, and resilience. As our metabolism slows and our bodies become less efficient at...

14 min read Learn

Queensland has taken one of the country’s most volatile political slogans and written it into criminal law. Under the state’s new hate speech law, two named expressions can now trigger prosecution. The offence applies when a person recites, publishes, distributes, or displays those words in public. It must also occur in circumstances that could reasonably...

11 min read

The phrase celebrities in Epstein files has taken over headlines, social media threads, and viral posts. The idea that hundreds of high-profile figures, from actors to politicians, are somehow tied to one of the most disturbing criminal cases in modern history grabs attention fast. But once you move past the headlines, the reality becomes far...

15 min read Eat

Memory complaints can make any headline sound urgent. Choline deserves attention, but it also deserves restraint. It is a real nutrient with clear biological roles. It is not a miracle discovery from nowhere. The National Institutes of Health says the body needs choline to make acetylcholine. That messenger is an “important neurotransmitter for memory.” Choline...

7 min read Heal

In our hyper-connected, fast-paced world, the transition from a hectic day to a restful night’s sleep can often feel like an impossible leap. Many of us lie in bed with our minds racing, replaying the day’s events or worrying about tomorrow’s to-do list. While there are countless sleep aids on the market, experts are increasingly...

6 min read Eat

We’ve all been there: you’re prepping for a picnic or making a batch of deviled eggs, you crack open a perfectly cooled shell, slice the egg in half, and instead of a vibrant, sunny yellow center, you find a murky, gray-ish green halo encircling the yolk. At first glance, it’s a bit off-putting. It looks...

9 min read Learn

Apple fans are used to flashy product launches, but the company often makes big changes under the radar. Recently, Apple retired devices from its lineup with very little fanfare. Reports suggest that as many as 15 products disappeared from Apple’s official store after new hardware announcements. For everyday users, the news raises an obvious question:...