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Are People Getting Lonelier? Experts Are Divided
Are human beings lonelier than we used to be? HowStuffWorks looks at the debate on loneliness.
The Ancient Mayfly Briefly Lives Only to Reproduce and DieÂ
animals.howstuffworks.com/insects/mayfly.htm
Mayflies have the shortest adult life span of any animal, but swarms of them can still be seen on weather radar.
Moths Are Mother Nature's Secret Pollinators
animals.howstuffworks.com/insects/moths-as-pollinators.htm
Bees get a lot of credit for pollinating important food crops, but they get a lot of secret help from their nocturnal friends, the moths.
Commensalism: I Benefit, You Don't, but It's All Good
science.howstuffworks.com/life/biology-fields/commensalism.htm
Commensalism is a form of cooperation among species in which one species benefits from another without the first one suffering any harm from the relationship.
Tapir: The Ancient Fruitarian With the Tiny Trunk
animals.howstuffworks.com/mammals/tapir.htm
The protection of these strange looking, ancient animals, and creatures like them, may be a key component in helping a planet in climate catastrophe.
You Need It Like a Hole in the Head: The Ancient Medical Art of Trepanation
health.howstuffworks.com/medicine/surgeries-procedures/trepanation.htm
Drilling a hole in somebody's skull was all the rage 4,000 to 12,000 years ago. In fact, 5 to 10 percent of skulls from this period have a hole in them, made while the person was still alive. The question is, why?
5 Reasons to Blow Your Nose Gently
health.howstuffworks.com/human-body/parts/5-reasons-to-blow-nose-gently.htm
Nose blowing seems safe enough, but if you do it too hard, you might wind up with one of these unpleasant medical conditions.
How to Play Jenga Like You've Never Played It Before
HowStuffWorks guarantees you'll never look at Jenga the same after you see it played these five ways.
Are Plastic-eating Enzymes Our Planet's Only Hope?
science.howstuffworks.com/environmental/green-science/plastic-eating-enzyme-planets-new-hope.htm
Two bacterial enzymes degrade PET plastics and could potentially be a solution to Earth's massive waste problem. HowStuffWorks looks at the science.
Do we really know more about space than the deep ocean?
science.howstuffworks.com/environmental/earth/oceanography/deep-ocean-exploration.htm
There's still a lot we don't know about the world. A thousand years ago, we thought we could literally sail off the edge of the planet. Good thing we're quick learners. But while space may be the final frontier, the ocean may be the greater mystery.