A hadeda ibis carries a worm it has just caught from an irrigated lawn.
Carla du Toit
Africa’s hadeda ibises can sense vibrations using a special sensory organ in their beaks. But they need moist soil for it to work.
Enough water is lost in the UK each day to fill around 1,200 Olympic-sized swimming pools.
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Why the UK still loses 3 billion litres of water a day through leaks.
Newly hatched loggerhead sea turtles (Caterra caretta ) journey from their nest toward the ocean.
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Scientists don’t know what prompts turtle hatchlings to emerge from their nests and head for the water, but vibrations appear to play a role.
A 1930s vibrator was just another household appliance.
Fiona Hanson/PA Images via Getty Images)
From its roots as an electric version of snake oil, by the 1930s vibrators were just another household electric appliance that could soothe your pains at the end of a long day.
Vibration devices have been used to treat everything from ‘hysteria’ to hair loss. So Marie Kondo’s tuning forks and crystals are nothing new.
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From vibrators for ‘hysteria’ to vibrating belts for weightloss. How we’ve been fascinated with shaking ourselves to health.
What do synchronized vibrations add to the mind/body question?
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A resonance theory of consciousness suggests that the way all matter vibrates, and the tendency for those vibrations to sync up, might be a way to answer the so-called ‘hard problem’ of consciousness.