Maintained by Seed's editors, web editors, and the other people who make Seed tick, Page 3.14 points you in the direction of some of ScienceBlogs' finest offerings, plus the tastiest tidbits of science news and opinion from around the web.
Other Good Stuff
MEMBER, ORDER OF THE SCIENCE SCOUTS OF EXEMPLARY REPUTE AND ABOVE AVERAGE PHYSIQUE
In this post: the large versions of the Life Science and Physical Science channel photos, comments from readers, and the best posts of the week. Life Science. A cheetah in the San Diego Wild Animal Park. From Flickr, by HBC4511...
In this post: the large versions of the Life Sciences and Physical Sciences channel photos, comments from readers, and the best posts of the week. Life Sciences. Solenostemon, a genus of perennial plants native to tropical Africa, Asia, and Australia....
In this post: the large versions of the Life Science and Physical Science channel photos, comments from readers, and the best posts of the week. Physical Science. A lever of the first class. From Flickr, by zaxl4...
In this post: the large versions of the Life Science, Physical Science and Environment channel photos, comments from readers, and the best posts of the week.
Matt Springer, ScienceBlogs' newest blogger, writes Built on Facts, and his posts are suitably laden with all kinds of interesting physics facts—and theories, quirks of the universe, and scientific ponderings.
The ScienceBlogs.de team caught up with Nobel Prize winner Douglas Osheroff (physics, 1996) in Lindau. In the video, he discusses the work that led to his award.
In this post: the large versions of the Life Science and Physical Science channel photos, comments from readers, and the best posts of the week! Life Science. From Flickr, by eye of einstein...
Each week we post a new picture and a choice comment from each of our nine channels here at ScienceBlogs on our channel homepages. Now, we're bringing you the best of the week in daily postings that will highlight individual...
A ground-based camera called "Lucky" takes photos of space that are sharper than those taken by the beloved Hubble telescope—and cost 50,000 times less.
If I like what I see, I'll receive 5 more issues (6 in all) for just $19.95. If I'm not completely satisfied, I'll simply write "cancel" on the invoice and owe nothing. The free issue is mine to keep.