Sid Perkins

Sid Perkins is a freelance science writer based in Crossville, Tenn.

All Stories by Sid Perkins

  1. Space

    Massive solar flares captured in 3-D

    Distance between orbiting STEREO craft allows better imaging of coronal mass ejections.

  2. Life

    Early land arthropods sported shells

    Ancient ocean-dwelling arthropods may have worn shells to enable their transition to land.

  3. Earth

    Arctic ice more vulnerable than ever

    Ocean’s ice cap is smaller than long-term average and thinnest yet as melt season begins.

  4. Tech

    Urban Heat: Recycling waste heat

    In the United States, only about one-eighth of the fuel people burn is converted into useful work. Recycling such wasted heat could be one of the best solutions to problems posted by growing cities.

  5. Urban heat

    Cities sizzle as more people move in.

  6. Earth

    Tallying emissions in ports and at sea

    Ships are major contributors to acid rain and ground-level ozone concentrations in some parts of the world.

  7. Birds, bats leave different wakes

    The aerodynamic tale left behind a bird is different from that left behind a bat.

  8. Paleontology

    Dino feathers may have had earlier origin than thought

    Researchers report that newly described dinosaur fossils suggest an ancient origin of feathers.

  9. Earth

    North America’s smallest dino predator

    A new fossil analysis uncovers what may have been North America’s tiniest dino predator.

  10. Earth

    Pushing back an oxygen-rich atmosphere

    Hematite crystals in Australian rocks hint that Earth’s atmosphere was oxygenated earlier than previously thought.

  11. Planetary Science

    Seeing the future hot spells

    Satellite data could help scientists better predict killer heat waves, such as the one that hit Europe in 2003.

  12. Earth

    Effects of the weather, underground

    Sudden changes in air temperature in the stratosphere that can ultimately steer major storm systems can also influence the number of subatomic particles slamming into detectors located hundreds of meters below ground, a new study reveals.