eBook Editions
Download by the issue and read Nautilus fromyour ebook reader of choice
ebook editions
Chapter one
Sun & Ice
Can You Spot the Real Animal Hybrid?
Take our quiz on nature’s mutant offspring.
A Strange New Gene Pool of Animals Is Brewing in the Arctic
Scientists have seen the future and it is “grolar bears.”
Michio Kaku Explains Consciousness for You
The gregarious physicist gets inside our brains.
Chapter two
Bits & Bobs
How Physics Is Like Three-Chord Rock
Like a set of common chords, the same math appears in diverse fields of physics.
10 Reasons Why You Can’t Live Without A Particle Accelerator
Particle accelerators can make you healthy and wealthy.
This Shape-Shifter Could Tell Us Why Matter Exists
Neutrinos can flit between states effortlessly, hinting at deep new physics.
The Astronomer Royal
Lord Martin Rees tells us about black holes and existential risks.
Chapter three
Living Change
If the World Began Again, Would Life as We Know It Exist?
Experiments in evolution are exploring what would happen if we rewound the tape of life.
How the Mormons Conquered America
The success of the Mormon religion is a study in social adaptation.
Meet the Father of Digital Life
This maverick forerunner of artificial life and animation remains largely unknown.
Ingenious: Cornelia Hesse-Honegger
A life of science and art.
Why I Traveled the World Hunting for Mutant Bugs
A researcher who works through painting tells her story.
Chapter four
The Summer 2014 Quarterly
The Great Lindemann
When We Were Fish
Paleontologist Neil Shubin explains how he charts evolution in the human body.
Six Pictures of Paradise
I was puzzled by the artist’s photographs of my home in the Amazon—then I looked again.
A Summer Gaze
The Summer 2014 Quarterly tackles image and object.
The Challenges of Illustrating Science
Two Nautilus artists share their creative visions.
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 Evolution’s Contrarian Capacity for Creativity
One of my favorite pastimes while traveling is watching birds. Not rare birds, mind you, but common ones: local variations on universal themes of sparrow and chickadee, crow and mockingbird.…
Read More -
Biology What’s Worse: Unwanted Mutations or Unwanted Humans?
After a fatal series of errors and malfunctions in the early morning of April 26, 1986, the core of the Chernobyl nuclear facility melted down and then exploded, killing 31 workers at the…
Read More -
Biology Carriers, Part 5: The Aftermath
This is the final installment of a five-part series. First read Part 1 , Part 2, Part 3, and Part 4 to get caught up. Correction: The text about tests that can be done 10 weeks into pregnancy…
Read More -
Biology Carriers, Part 4: The Results
This is the fourth installment of a five-part series. First read Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3 to get caught up; then go on to Part 5.Lauren R. Weinstein is a cartoonist, cartooning teacher,…
Read More