Wonder on the Web

Issue 42: Links to amazing stuff.

Babies See What You Can’t

We can imagine what it’s like to see the world as a newborn: literally everything is new. Overwhelming, right? So when we get a little bit older (even five months), we develop ways to deal with this information overload. But it’s not just that we learn to “tune out” details that aren’t important—some image differences actually become invisible to us as we age. Scientists call this phenomenon perceptual constancy, and it’s an adaptive tool that helps us recognize an object as being the same even in different conditions (particularly in terms of lighting). It turns out that sometimes it can be good to see an illusion as reality.

Prehistoric Mystery Meat: It's What's for Dinner

Intrigue, exploits, laboratories, dinner parties, ancient code, “flesh-eating beasts”: this piece from The Atlantic on the 1951 Explorers Club dinner has it all. At the story’s center: A rumor that the club would be serving its members a slice of mammoth. We wouldn’t want to spoil the mystery, so we highly recommend you read it.

Meanwhile, you can’t order a nice mammoth steak at one of the National Park Service’s newest units. But the Waco Mammoth National Monument does have a new paleontological site where you can see in situ fossils of Columbian mammoths (bigger, Southern-dwelling, wool-less relatives of the woolly mammoths). The monument hosts the only recorded discovery of a nursery herd of these mammoths in the United States. Continuing excavations have already uncovered the fossils of around 25 mammoths, plus a prehistoric camel and other animals.

Walking on Water: USU Researchers Unravel Science of Skipping Spheres

Physics is especially fun if you work at the Splash Lab, Utah State University’s “Premiere Incompressible Fluids Lab.” The team’s latest project, published with the title “Elastic spheres can walk on water,” studied the science behind skipping stones and why it’s so much easier to get a good skip with an elastic ball. Their research provides more insight into the physics behind water skis, plastic boats, even the basilisk lizard. We’ll let engineering professor Tadd Truscott have the last word: “In general, I’ve always found that childish curiosity often leads to profound discovery.”

Kayaking Through Tham Khoun Xe

Even if spelunking’s not your thing, you’ll be awestruck by the mesmerizing scenes in this video from Ryan Deboodt, who specializes in “cave and adventure photography.” The filming was done over the course of a two day kayaking trip through Tham Khoun Xe, one of the world’s largest active river caves. Deboodt showcases the beauty of creation through real artistry in presentation—meditative music, soaring aerial shots, and time-lapse footage of the starry sky from the vantage point of the Xe Bang Fai River below.

Also in this issue

The Behemoth was a small digital magazine about a big God and his big world. It aimed to help people behold the glory of God all around them, in the worlds of science, history, theology, medicine, sociology, Bible, and personal narrative.

Our Latest

Public Theology Project

When Christians Contemplate Assisted Suicide

Answering a reader’s tragic question requires more than a sound theology of hell.

We Are Obsessed with Gender

With incoherent language trickled down from academic theorists, we think and talk about gender incessantly—and to our detriment.

I Failed to Mature as an Artist—Until I Learned to See

Drawing is a way of entrusting what I can see to the care and attention of God.

Jesus Did Not Serve Grape Juice

Why reopen debate about what we serve for Communion? Because it matters that we follow God’s commands.

How A Pastor’s Book Inspired a New Rom-Com

Mike Todd’s book, Relationship Goals, gets a spotlight in a film aimed at both Christian and secular audiences.

The Russell Moore Show

Charles Marsh on Bonhoeffer’s 120th Birthday

What does it mean to follow Jesus when the state is demanding your loyalty—and the church is tempted to comply?

Bracing for ICE Raids, Haitians Get Temporary Reprieve

A federal judge on Monday extended deportation protections for Haitian immigrants. While they waited for the ruling, pastors in Springfield, Ohio, gathered and prayed.

How ChatGPT Revealed a False Diagnosis

Luke Simon

A devastating cancer diagnosis wrecked a young couple. But after five years of uncertainty, a chatbot changed everything.

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