News

Researchers from the University of Calgary in Canada have found that living things produce a faint ghostly glow. And their new study proves that this light is snuffed out the moment we die.
Find Your Next Book Thrillers N.Y.C. Literary Guide Nonfiction Summer Preview Advertisement Supported by Fiction In Munir Hachemi’s novel “Living Things,” four young men seek adventure for ...
A team of researchers have conducted a series of experiments showing that living things emit a very weak, but detectable packets of light. The signal is at the photonic level, according to a study ...
All living things, including humans, constantly emit a ghostly glow – and it appears to vanish almost as soon as we die. Monitoring this signal could one day help track forest health or even ...
From plants and bacteria to animals and humans, our world is filled with many living things. In fact, there are approximately 8.7 million species of plants and animals in existence, and only 1. ...
In other words, it treats us (along with other living things, from corals to birds) not as the passive outcome of our environments but as the active architects of our world. Godfrey-Smith begins ...
Anthropology graduate student Graham Callaway recently published an article entitled The Archaeology of Living Things (Vivifacts) in Virginia and Beyond in ‘Environmental Archaeology: The Journal of ...
As living things, works of art change and grow older (thus the “Old” Masters), just as we do, finding their place in the world, surviving—or more often not surviving—the ravages of time.
Save guides, add subjects and pick up where you left off with your BBC account. Trees and animals are living things. Dry leaves on the ground are dead, but they were once part of a living tree.