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Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Paradise LOST

Spin a globe slowly to find New Zealand. It’s one of the world’s most isolated island countries. Australia, the nearest significant land mass, is over a thousand miles away. Composed of two big islands stretching almost 1,000 miles (1,600 km) from north to south, and a galaxy of smaller islands, New Zealand is believed to be a fragment of the ancient southern continent of Gondwanaland.

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7 mins  |
July/August 2020
Do You Really Want a Flying Car?
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Do You Really Want a Flying Car?

It's the year 2020. So where are all the flying cars? The vast majority of people still get to work and school in boring, ground-bound cars. Not to mention buses, trains, and bikes.

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2 mins  |
May/June 2020
Up For a Challenge
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Up For a Challenge

University students compete with cutting-edge cars in the AutoDrive Challenge.

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7 mins  |
May/June 2020
A System In Sync
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

A System In Sync

Smart cars need smart roads.

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6 mins  |
May/June 2020
Powering the Road Ahead
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Powering the Road Ahead

ARE HYBRIDS OR ELECTRIC VEHICLES THE WHEELS OF THE FUTURE?

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3 mins  |
May/June 2020
Moral Machines - TOUGH QUESTIONS ABOUT SELF-DRIVING CARS
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Moral Machines - TOUGH QUESTIONS ABOUT SELF-DRIVING CARS

Have you ever heard of the trolley problem? It is a set of imaginary scenarios used by ethicists— people who ask questions about right and wrong.

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5 mins  |
May/June 2020
SANJEEV SHARMA-TECHNOLOGY PIONEER
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

SANJEEV SHARMA-TECHNOLOGY PIONEER

High-speed railroad cars, rockets, and now drones—what will mechanical engineer Sanjeev Sharma do next? Sharma is currently head of vehicle engineering at Matternet, a drone company in Mountain View, California. Whatever lies ahead, he’ll probably be at the forefront of new technologies that serve others.

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4 mins  |
May/June 2020
OLIVIA WANLESS
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

OLIVIA WANLESS

AUTODRIVE TEAM CAPTAIN

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3 mins  |
May/June 2020
MORPHING ART
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

MORPHING ART

It’s more than meets the eye.

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1 min  |
May/June 2020
Drone Home
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Drone Home

UAVs MAY CHANGE THE WAY PACKAGES ARE DELIVERED.

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3 mins  |
May/June 2020
DRIVERLESS ED
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

DRIVERLESS ED

TEACHING CARS TO DRIVE THEMSELVES IS A LOT LIKE TEACHING PEOPLE.

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4 mins  |
May/June 2020
Sole Beauty
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Sole Beauty

The painful history of foot binding

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6 mins  |
April 2020
Selling Socks to Save Seabirds
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Selling Socks to Save Seabirds

Brothers Will and Matty Gladstone are comitted to conservation.

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5 mins  |
April 2020
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Whose Foot?

Everybody is different. So why do we use feet to measure length?

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4 mins  |
April 2020
Reflexology – A Different Kind of Map
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Reflexology – A Different Kind of Map

There’s nothing like a foot rub after a long day. The question is, can putting pressure on the toes and heels help other body parts—like your head, back, and stomach— feel better too? Fans of reflexology think so. This practice uses massage on specific reflex points to relieve tension and improve health. It dates back more than 4,500 years, but doctors and scientists do not fully agree that rubbing the feet can cure ailments throughout the body.

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6 mins  |
April 2020
Tyler Clites – Biomedical Engineer
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Tyler Clites – Biomedical Engineer

Tyler Clites is a tinkerer. He’s been this way since childhood—coming up with inventions and taking things apart.

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4 mins  |
April 2020
On Point
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

On Point

THIS DANCE TECHNIQUE LOOKS EFFORTLESS, BUT APPEARANCES CAN BE DECEIVING.

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5 mins  |
April 2020
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Q&A

Q&A

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2 mins  |
April 2020
MULTI-PURPOSE TOOLS
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

MULTI-PURPOSE TOOLS

There are more than 10,000 species of birds. They range in size from birds that weigh less than an ounce to birds that weigh hundreds of pounds and can inflict a deadly kick. They live on land or water; in tropical rainforests or in the Arctic tundra; they climb trees or dive into water. So it’s not surprising that birds have many different types of feet capable of performing amazing feats.

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2 mins  |
April 2020
10! 10! Say it again!
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

10! 10! Say it again!

10! 10! Say it again!

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2 mins  |
April 2020
Muse News
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Muse News

Muse News

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2 mins  |
April 2020
Trial in Absentia
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Trial in Absentia

In the 40th century, the most intellectually advanced species in the galaxy initiates a project to bring back as many extinct species as possible. They have already returned hundreds of species to life after careful evaluation by the Committee for the Revivification of Extinct Species (CaRES). The purpose of the committee is to evaluate whether each species meets just one criterion: “There must be no overwhelming, compelling evidence that the species should not be revived.” Here is an excerpt from the transcript of the meeting where members debate the revivification of an extinct species: humans.

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4 mins  |
March 2020
The Rise & Fall of the Terror Birds
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

The Rise & Fall of the Terror Birds

AFTER THE DINOSAURS, A NEW PREDATOR REIGNED IN SOUTH AMERICA. FOR A WHILE.

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6 mins  |
March 2020
SHOULD SCIENTISTS BRING BACK DINOSAURS?
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

SHOULD SCIENTISTS BRING BACK DINOSAURS?

IN THE JURASSIC PARK MOVIES, scientists bring dinosaurs to life.

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2 mins  |
March 2020
MARIA A. GANDOLFO
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

MARIA A. GANDOLFO

Animals and insects aren’t the only ones that leave their remains in stone and amber! Meet paleobotanist Maria A. Gandolfo, who studies fossils made from flowering plants. A flowering plant tucks its seeds inside a flower instead of growing them on its leaves. Most of the plants we eat and use as medicine and fuel are flowering plants. Today they flower all over the planet—but that wasn’t always the case. Here Gandolfo explains what plant fossils can tell us and how flowering plants got to be such a big deal.

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3 mins  |
March 2020
LOVE
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

LOVE

My pets are my own true loves.

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1 min  |
March 2020
ERIN ARGYILAN
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

ERIN ARGYILAN

Erin Argyilan of Indiana University is known for her lively teaching style and leading some of the best geology field trips in the Chicagoland area. She takes people of all ages on interactive tours that lead to dune climbing, animal identifying, and accessing some of the rarest plants in the world. Read on to learn about the major mystery surrounding the Cretaceous Period’s effect on midwestern geology.

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3 mins  |
March 2020
ARE WE LIVING IN THE ANTHROPOCENE?
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

ARE WE LIVING IN THE ANTHROPOCENE?

A name can tell you a lot about a person. Take your last name, for example. Does it come from a certain language, a place where your ancestors were born, a traditional family occupation? How about your first name? What does it say about you? If you could change it, would you? What would you change it to, and why?

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5 mins  |
March 2020
A Visit to the PAST
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

A Visit to the PAST

WELCOME TO TEXAS’ BIG BEND NATIONAL PARK

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5 mins  |
March 2020
THE DAY THE CRETACEOUS ENDED
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

THE DAY THE CRETACEOUS ENDED

When the asteroid hit, it sent Cret trillions of tons of molten rock and dust into the atmosphere, much of it hotter than the surface of the sun.

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7 mins  |
March 2020