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Chapter one
Motes
Bacteria Are Masters of Tai Chi
The remarkable science that helped me understand what it means to be a physicist.
The Ecologist Who Threw Starfish
Robert Paine showed us the surprising importance of predators.
The Surprising Importance of Stratospheric Life
The science of bacteria in the atmosphere is getting its moment in the sun.
Chapter two
Figments
Selfishness Is Learned
We tend to be cooperative—unless we think too much.
In Which I Try to Become a Swift
The closest I ever got to flying with the birds was on the ground.
When Pigs Fly
It’s no fairy tale—factory farms and air travel form a viral expressway to pandemics.
What Wild Animals Do in the Dark of the Night
Capturing wildlife with flash photography at the turn of the century.
Chapter three
Trends
Paving Over the Fossil Record
Why isn’t India doing more to protect its rare evolutionary record?
Why Is Biomedical Research So Conservative?
Funding, incentives, and skepticism of theory make some scientists play it safe.
Is This New Swim Stroke the Fastest Yet?
The surprising performance and physics of the fish kick.
Zombies Must Be Dualists
What the existence of zombies would do to our philosophy of mind.
Chapter four
Waves
The Perfect Wave Is Coming
Surfers have dreamt it—now engineers are delivering.
The Lessons of a Ghost Planet
Vulcan shows us science beyond the scientific method.
When Good Waves Go Rogue
Even in calm seas, waves can become monsters.
The Fly in the Primordial Soup
Hydrothermal vent models transform the origins of life from unlikely to near-inevitable.
Chapter five
Categories
Can Topology Prevent Another Financial Crash?
New regulations are applying network science to restructure global finance.
Ingenious: Nathaniel Comfort
The science historian talks to Nautilus.
Fish School Us on Wind Power
Record-efficiency turbine farms are being inspired by sealife.
How Big Can Life Get?
An illustrated trip from smallest to biggest.
The Ocean Gets Big Data
A new array of cameras, vehicles, and sensors promises to change ocean science.
Related Facts So Romantic
“Reality provides us with facts so romantic that imagination itself could add nothing to them.” —Jules Verne
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