Views
- Domesticating horses had a huge impact on human society—new science rewrites where and when it first happened.
- Sphinx months have an array of identifiers, one being an unusual defense mechanism.
- Fifteen years after Ed O’Bannon’s groundbreaking lawsuit, college athletes continue to benefit from greater control of their name, image and likeness.
- Employee ownership is a proven answer to known problems; I saw it in my own research.
- Kamala Harris’ identity as a biracial woman is either a strength or a weakness, depending on whom you ask.
- Australia’s largest iron ore deposits are 1 billion years younger than previously thought.
- Lingering question: Do variations in scent correspond to variations in color?
- 'Right or wrong, our country' is a popular but flawed expression of patriotism; a morally responsible patriot, on the other hand, tries to protect and improve her country’s moral character.
- With high levels of oxalic acid, like that in Brussels sprouts, and with a proliferation of seed dispersal, the plant easily establishes itself everywhere except Greenland.
- Sports gambling creates a windfall, but raises questions of integrity, says CU Boulder researcher Jared Bahir Browsh.