
The Life of Sand
Sand is the consummate shapeshifter, marking time as it sifts through an hourglass, forming ephemeral wave patterns on a beach, squeezing between one’s toes or even morphing into the concrete of our buildings. Yet few realize sand’s fascinating story. What is sand, and where does it form?

An Urchin in Hand
An Urchin in Hand Red pencil urchin (Heterocentrotus mamillatus) in Hawaii Sea urchin skeletons are frequent finds along the Maine coast. With luck, the shell-like skeleton is entire but denuded of the animal’s tube feet and protective spines, revealing orderly but mysterious patterns of tiny knobs and holes. Alive, a sea urchin is equally enigmatic.

Grow a spine or two – in defense of cacti
Cacti are more than charismatic desert superstars of movie Westerns. They have fascinating biology, and some even live in rainforests.

Avoiding the Big Freeze – Animals in the Cold
Avoiding the Big Freeze – Animals in the Cold A spider, about 1 centimeter long, traveling on the snow at -2°C (28°F) Imagine a tiny spider no more than a centimeter long. Winter is in full force, and the spider’s body temperature is below freezing as it slowly crawls across the snow. Yet, the spider

FOAM-Oh!
FOAM-Oh! 1 Stream foam collecting around fall leaves Foam isn’t just stuff that comes out of shaving cream cans, keeps your take-out coffee hot, or floats in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.2 It is a ubiquitous natural phenomenon that is fascinating and can affect rainfall; has caused seabird die-offs; and influences global climate. Don’t sell

Mice-capades
Mice-capades Mice1 live in a gray zone between the heroic and charismatic mini-fauna that star in Disney movies, children’s stories, and cartoons2 and the reviled, disease-infested rodents that a multi-billion-dollar-a-year industry is dedicated to eliminating. It’s no wonder that mice seem nervous all the time. As we shall see, however, despite their tiny physical stature,