eBook Editions
Download by the issue and read Nautilus fromyour ebook reader of choice
ebook editions
Chapter one
Slow Living
Why Your Brain Hates Slowpokes
The high speed of society has jammed your internal clock.
How to Turn Your Dog Off
Suspended animation is becoming a life-saving medical procedure.
How Music Hijacks Our Perception of Time
A composer details how music works its magic on our brains.
Chapter two
Slow Matter
The Philosopher King of the Hoverflies
A roving meditation on nature, literature, and the joy of collecting flies.
The Fly King Speaks
Meet Fredrik Sjöberg, author of the sleeper hit, The Fly Trap.
Los Angeles Should Be Buried
A day in the war between the city and its mountains.
Whiskey Can’t Hide Its Age Either
Anxious distillers are trying to make bourbon old before its time.
Before There Were Stars
The unlikely heroes that made starlight possible.
How To Clock a Glacier
Portable slow-light technology could measure the speed of glaciers in real time.
Chapter three
The Old
Why Egg Freezing Is an Impossible Choice
I don’t want to surrender to a lottery. But will I regret not playing?
The Rise and Fall of the Living Fossil
The idea that some species are relics that have stopped evolving is finally going extinct.
The Secret History of the Supernova at the Bottom of the Sea
How a star explosion may have shaped life on Earth.
The Gravekeeper’s Paradox
People want permanent tombstones that also show decay.
Trying Not to Try
Modern science and Chinese philosophy tell us similar stories about how we think.
What a 9,000-Year-Old Spruce Tree Taught Me
How photographing the world’s oldest living things pushed me outside the boundaries of science.
Chapter four
Frontiers
The Impossible Physiology of the Free Diver
The amazing underwater athletes are rewriting the science of the body.
Jupiter Is a Garden of Storms
Why the Great Red Spot refuses to die.
A Photographer Who Tinkers with Time
How Adam Magyar slows down in the most impatient places.
Ingenious: Helen Fisher
Talking sex, brains, and commitment with the best-selling scientist of love.
The 315-Year-Old Science Experiment
How counting sunspots unites the past and future of science.
Related Facts So Romantic
“Reality provides us with facts so romantic that imagination itself could add nothing to them.” —Jules Verne
See All Blog Posts-
Biology If You Were a Secret Message, Where in the Human Genome Would You Hide?
When people think about SETI, the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence, they imagine messages sent via radio—Jodie Foster tuning antennas, hoping to pick up signals from the “billions…
Read More -
Numbers Will You Be Able to Read this Article in 1,000 Years?
If you ask Anthony Weiner, digital records—especially those on the Internet—can seem impossibly hard to get rid of. When a picture or document is reduced to a series of 1s and 0s, it…
Read More -
Ideas Why Do People Have Such Strong Feelings for the Portland Airport’s Carpet?
“Take a pic of your feet on the carpet,” texted my sister. I had just landed in Portland, Oregon, to visit my siblings, and was walking to the airport exit. Autocorrect must have made…
Read More -
Culture How to Make Art That Withstands the Test of Time
In the 1930s, Russian-born sculptor Naum Gabo started experimenting with a thin, plastic material called celluloid. Previously used as film for photography or to make cheap jewelry,…
Read More