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The Conversation

Why are so many languages spoken in some places and so few in others?

  • Written by Marco Túlio Pacheco Coelho, Ph.D. Student in Ecology, Universidade Federal de Goias
What factors contribute to some places having many, while other places have few?VLADGRIN/Shutterstock.com

People across the world describe their thoughts and emotions, share experiences and spread ideas through the use of thousands of distinct languages. These languages form a fundamental part of our humanity. They determine whom we communicate...

Read more: Why are so many languages spoken in some places and so few in others?

A brief astronomical history of Saturn's amazing rings

  • Written by Vahe Peroomian, Associate Professor of Physics and Astronomy, University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
With giant Saturn hanging in the blackness and sheltering Cassini from the Sun's blinding glare, the spacecraft viewed the rings as never before.

Many dream of what they would do had they a time machine. Some would travel 100 million years back in time, when dinosaurs roamed the Earth. Not many, though, would think of taking a telescope with them,...

Read more: A brief astronomical history of Saturn's amazing rings

Fifty years ago, Jimi Hendrix's Woodstock anthem expressed the hopes and fears of a nation

  • Written by Mark Clague, Associate Professor of Musicology, University of Michigan
Hendrix's version of the National Anthem combined reverence and revolution.nelag0/pixabay, CC BY

One of the most powerful, searing renditions of the national anthem ever recorded, Jimi Hendrix’s iconic Woodstock anthem, almost never happened.

In his memoir, Hendrix’s drummer, Mitch Mitchell, admitted that the band “hadn’t...

Read more: Fifty years ago, Jimi Hendrix's Woodstock anthem expressed the hopes and fears of a nation

50 years ago, Jimi Hendrix's Woodstock anthem expressed the hopes and fears of a nation

  • Written by Mark Clague, Associate Professor of Musicology, University of Michigan
Hendrix's version of the National Anthem combined reverence and revolution.nelag0/pixabay, CC BY

One of the most powerful, searing renditions of the national anthem ever recorded, Jimi Hendrix’s iconic Woodstock anthem, almost never happened.

In his memoir, Hendrix’s drummer, Mitch Mitchell, admitted that the band “hadn’t...

Read more: 50 years ago, Jimi Hendrix's Woodstock anthem expressed the hopes and fears of a nation

One budget line Congress can agree on: Spending billions on the US military

  • Written by Rebecca U. Thorpe, Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Washington
Since WWII, there's been strong partisan support for military spending.Mircea Moira/Shutterstock.com

The two-year budget deal signed into law in July marks a rare bipartisan agreement.

The deal adds US$320 billion over current spending levels spread across defense and non-defense programs, averting the threat of debt default until after the 2020...

Read more: One budget line Congress can agree on: Spending billions on the US military

Huge wildfires in the Arctic and far North send a planetary warning

  • Written by Nancy Fresco, SNAP Coordinator, Research Faculty, University of Alaska Fairbanks
Smoke from wildfires in Siberia drifts east toward Canada and the U.S. on July 30, 2019.NASA

The planet’s far North is burning. This summer, over 600 wildfires have consumed more than 2.4 million acres of forest across Alaska. Fires are also raging in northern Canada. In Siberia, choking smoke from 13 million acres – an area nearly the...

Read more: Huge wildfires in the Arctic and far North send a planetary warning

Mexico wants to run a tourist train through its Mayan heartland — should it?

  • Written by Gabriel Diaz Montemayor, Assistant Professor of Landscape Architecture, University of Arkansas

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has a dream for the Yucatan Peninsula. He wants to build a train that will leverage the tourism economy of Cancun by bringing more visitors inland to the colonial cities, Mayan villages and archaeological sites that dot the region.

The Yucatan is a unique Mexican cultural crossroads. Many Maya...

Read more: Mexico wants to run a tourist train through its Mayan heartland — should it?

Surprising volunteers with awards is one way to keep them on board

  • Written by Marlene Walk, Assistant Professor of Public and Environmental Affairs, IUPUI
Cub Scouts outings aren't possible without dedicated volunteers.Karin Hildebrand Lau/Shutterstock.com

The United States has a long tradition of volunteering. Back in 1737, for instance, Benjamin Franklin co-founded the nation’s first volunteer fire brigade in Philadelphia.

And this custom is still going strong. About 77.4 million Americans...

Read more: Surprising volunteers with awards is one way to keep them on board

We use satellites to measure water scarcity

  • Written by Emad Hasan, Postdoctoral Researcher in Geography, Binghamton University, State University of New York
Visualization of the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission satellite in space over a tropical cyclone.NASA

Today, more than 700 million people around the world drink water from unsafe or untreated sources, such as wells, springs and surface water.

About half of these people live in sub-Saharan Africa. In fact, in more than 30 African countries,...

Read more: We use satellites to measure water scarcity

Want better sleep? Try a warm bath or shower 1-2 hours before bedtime, study suggests

  • Written by Shahab Haghayegh, Doctoral candidate, biomedical engineering, University of Texas at Austin
There's a biological reason why a warm bath before bedtime can improve sleep quality.iordani/Shutterstock.com

Do you struggle trying to fall asleep? Do you feel you don’t get enough sleep and you feel sleepy during the day? You are not alone. The American Academy of Sleep Medicine has found that one in three American adults have symptoms of...

Read more: Want better sleep? Try a warm bath or shower 1-2 hours before bedtime, study suggests

More Articles ...

  1. New laws give victims more time to report rape or sexual assault – even Jeffrey Epstein's
  2. Saving endangered species: 5 essential reads
  3. Restoring soil can help address climate change
  4. Guatemala's next president has few plans for fixing rampant corruption, crime and injustice
  5. I'm one of hundreds of archaeologists exiled from Syria who's mourning what the war is costing us
  6. A neuroscience-based action plan to deal with stress after El Paso and Dayton shootings
  7. Making money off of politics isn't new – it was business as usual in the Gilded Age
  8. The journalist who exposed the Jeffrey Epsteins of Victorian London
  9. New climate change report underscores the need to manage land for the short and long term
  10. Why the 2020 census matters for rural Americans
  11. Talking about Charlottesville with alt-right students
  12. Remote control for brain cells: scientists use ultrasound waves to activate neurons
  13. The new field of sonogenetics uses sound waves to control the behavior of brain cells
  14. Companies promoting causes can be accused of 'wokewashing' – allying themselves only for good PR
  15. Curious Kids: Is homework worthwhile?
  16. Saudi women are fighting for their freedom – and their hard-won victories are growing
  17. Americans’ support for immigration is at record highs – but the government is out of sync with their views
  18. Can experts determine who might be a mass killer? 3 questions answered
  19. I traveled to American Samoa 5 times to study the secret to its football success
  20. 5 tips for parents to build communication skills with children with autism spectrum disorder
  21. NASCAR may be the fastest way to learn about physics
  22. Trump's fight to count US citizens and non-citizens: 5 questions answered
  23. Gender equality at home takes a hit when children arrive
  24. Climate change will mean more multiyear snow droughts in the West
  25. 5 reasons why Trump's Venezuela embargo won't end the Maduro regime
  26. A tick detective wants to understand what drives tick abundance
  27. What 1860 and 1968 can teach America about the 2020 presidential election
  28. French cannabis legalization debate ignores race, religion and the mass incarceration of Muslims
  29. Mass shootings aren't growing more common – and evidence contradicts common stereotypes about the killers
  30. Blood tests for Alzheimer’s: Two experts on why new studies are encouraging
  31. The US-China trade war: 5 essential reads
  32. How to grow human mini-livers in the lab to help solve liver disease
  33. Drilling deeper wells is a band-aid solution to US groundwater woes
  34. Everything in Mecca gets 5 stars — and online reviews of other holy sites are wildly inflated, too
  35. The facts on the US children and teens killed by firearms
  36. The 'warspeak' permeating everyday language puts us all in the trenches
  37. Guns and mental illness: A psychiatrist explains the complexities
  38. From across the globe to El Paso, changes in the language of the far-right explain its current violence
  39. Space travel might fry your brain, causing permanent learning and memory problems
  40. Astronauts' brains are subject to long-lasting damage due to low dose space radiation
  41. Police are more likely to kill men and women of color
  42. Stop blaming video games for mass killings
  43. How the University of Alaska – and other public U.S. universities – now struggle for funding
  44. This tax credit wasn't meant to help with housing, but that's exactly what it's doing
  45. Will Trump’s trade war with China ever end?
  46. Human breast milk may help babies tell time via circadian signals from mom
  47. Why do so many working class Americans feel politics is pointless?
  48. Understanding Christians' climate views can lead to better conversations about the environment
  49. Boost in high school students taking advanced computer science could change the face of tech
  50. Could a national buyback program reduce gun violence in America?