Unlike Earth’s atmosphere, Jupiter’s ‘sky’ hosts magnificent shades of orange, white, brown and blue.
NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Gerald Eichstädt
Atmospheres can be all different colours, depending on what’s in them.
There are many ideas about why languages evolve – and all of them are likely to contain an element of truth.
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Languages are always changing and evolving- largely because humans have alwasy been on the move.
From shutterstock.com
Spit, drool, dribble, slaver, slobber or sputum – saliva has many different names. It also has many different jobs.
Many books, like ‘Charlotte’s Web,’ contain symbolism.
Dmitriy Os Ivanov/Shutterstock.com
Authors sometimes put deeper meanings into their stories, but really, it’s the reader who decides.
You open your mouth and sound comes out but what’s happening in your body?
InesBazdar/Shutterstock
The sound comes from our lungs and our voice box, which is at the front of the throat. Here’s how it works.
Saturn is one of a few planets in our solar system surrounded by rings.
Vadim Sadovski/Shutterstock/Elements of this image furnished by NASA
We’re not sure how the rings work or how they formed, but there are a few theories.
Dr. Winifred Frick examines a bat for white-nose syndrome.
Alan Hicks
Researchers are puzzled by a fungus that is killing millions of bats.
Too much caffeine interferes with sleep.
Luis Molinero/Shutterstock.com
Since caffeine is in so many different foods and drinks, it’s easy for kids – or grownups – to get more than they should without realizing it.
NASA/Pat Rawlings, SAIC
An expert explains the challenges of a mission to Mars for younger readers.
Teachers walk the picket line outside Northern Secondary School in Toronto, on Dec. 4, 2019.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Cole Burston
Short answer: they don’t. But striking teachers often receive a bit of financial help during a strike from money they themselves have already paid to their unions.
Need a handkerchief?
Num LP Photo/Shutterstock
Like many plants, onions have defenses to ward off creatures that may want to eat them. Their secret weapon is a kind of natural tear gas.
Looking out the window instead might stop you feeling sick, but that doesn’t work for everyone.
Vadiar/Shutterstock
When you read in the back seat of the car, your eyes tell your brain you’re still. But your ears can sense you’re moving. Your eyes and ears are having an argument that your brain is trying to settle.
Your calendar dates back to Babylonian times.
Aleksandra Pikalova/Shutterstock.com
The Babylonians’ calendar was passed down from civilization to civilization.
Magpies have a few clever tricks to help them find food.
Gisela Kaplan
Magpies have such good hearing, they can hear the very faint sound of grass roots being chewed.
But why? But why?
Odua Images/Shutterstock.com
If you’ve ever spent even a few minutes with children, you’ve probably heard them ask a question or two. Or many more. Here are answers to a handful.
This started as a mountain range.
Bas Meelker/Shutterstock.com
Sand may seem abundant when your toes are buried in it, but it’s becoming scarce along many coastlines around the world.
takver
What is the climate emergency, and whose climate crisis is it anyway?
Every kid should have their own cell phone. Or should they?
Syda Productions/Shutterstock.com
If you’re thinking about a smartphone, talk with your parents.
From red, to blue, to purple, to yellow and even green – why do our bruises change colour?
From shutterstock.com
When you hurt yourself, tiny blood vessels can break under the skin. The blood that oozes out is what gives a bruise its colour.
Young Americans today are more likely to say that they’re dissatisfied with the current state of affairs.
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A teen asks why so many young people don’t stand for the Pledge of Allegiance or the national anthem. The data shows that young Americans today do view the U.S. more negatively than older generations.