Helen Thompson is the multimedia editor at Science News. She makes videos, creates data visuals, helps manage the website, wrangles cats and occasionally writes about things like dandelion flight and whale evolution. She has undergraduate degrees in biology and English from Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas, a master’s degree in science writing from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, and strong opinions about tacos. Before Science News, she wrote for Smithsonian, NPR.org, National Geographic, Nature and others.
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All Stories by Helen Thompson
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AnimalsHornbills join toucans in the cool beak club
Like toucans, southern yellow-billed hornbills keep things chill with cool beaks.
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AnimalsHistory of road-tripping shaped camel DNA
Centuries of caravan domestication and travel left some metaphorical tire marks on Arabian camel genes, researchers find.
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PlantsVenus flytraps use defensive genes for predation
Genetic analysis suggests that Venus flytraps repurposed plant defenses against herbivores to live the carnivore life.
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AnimalsWhy Labrador retrievers are obsessed with food
A genetic variant could explain obesity trends seen in Labrador retrievers.
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Particle PhysicsA weasel has shut down the Large Hadron Collider
A tiny furball brought Earth’s most powerful particle accelerator to its knees this morning.
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PlantsNightshade plants bleed sugar as a call to ants for backup
Bittersweet nightshade produces sugary wound goo to lure in ant protectors that eat herbivores, researchers have found.
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AnimalsPeacocks twerk to shake their tail feathers
Researchers reveal the biomechanics of the peacock mating dance.
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AnimalsMath models predict mysterious monarch navigation
Researchers have come up with a series of equations to predict how monarchs use their eyes and antennae to figure out how to get to Mexico.
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AnimalsPied flycatchers cruise nonstop for days to cross the Sahara
Teeny, tiny passerine birds called pied flycatchers fly day and night during their annual migration south across the Sahara.
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Health & MedicineFive things to know about Zika
Last week, a public health poll pointed to some myths that have been circulating about Zika. Let’s bust them.
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AnimalsAncient snake wore green
Scientists have reconstructed the skin coloration of a fossilized snake that’s about 10 million years old.
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AnimalsGreen was this ancient snake’s signature color
Scientists have reconstructed the skin coloration of a fossilized snake that’s about 10 million years old.