Sid Perkins

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

All Stories by Sid Perkins

  1. Earth

    From Bad to Worse: Earth’s warming to accelerate

    Global warming is real and will continue, and there's strong evidence that people are to blame, an international panel of scientists has concluded.

  2. Ecosystems

    An unexpected, thriving ecosystem

    A diverse group of creatures beneath an Antarctic ice shelf could give pause to researchers who infer past ecological conditions from fossils found in such sediments.

  3. Earth

    Corn, a new sensor of carbon dioxide

    Scientists have developed a way to use corn plants to monitor and map human-generated emissions of carbon dioxide.

  4. Tech

    Wrinkle, wrinkle, little polymer

    Scientists have developed a cheap and easy way to create specific patterns of tiny wrinkles on the surface of a flexible and commonly used polymer, a technique that could be used to fabricate an assortment of microdevices.

  5. Materials Science

    Microstructures make a beetle brilliant

    Engineers looking to make a variety of surfaces whiter and brighter could learn a few things from a lowly beetle.

  6. Earth

    Sudden Chill

    Today's combination of nuclear proliferation, political instability, and urban demographics increases the likelihood that humankind could suffer a devastating nuclear winter.

  7. Paleontology

    Ancient Glider: Dinosaur took to the air in biplane style

    About 125 million years before the Wright Brothers took to the air with their biplane, a 1-meter-long dinosaur may have been swooping from tree to tree using the same arrangement of wings.

  8. Paleontology

    Going Under Down Under: Early people at fault in Australian extinctions

    A lengthy, newly compiled fossil record of Australian mammals bolsters the notion that humanity's arrival on the island continent led to the extinction of many large creatures there.

  9. Earth

    2006: Hottest year in U.S. history

    Preliminary analyses of weather data gathered from more than 1,200 sites across the continental United States indicate that last year was the warmest on record.

  10. Paleontology

    Of penguins’ range and climate change

    Variations in the range of Adélie penguins along one section of Antarctica's coast during the past 45,000 years are a keen indicator of climate change there.

  11. Materials Science

    Electrode Enhancements: New materials may boost fuel cell performance

    Two teams have independently discovered ways to dramatically improve the materials used in the electrodes of fuel cells.

  12. Paleontology

    Paleotrickery: A lengthy lineage for leaf-mimicking insects

    Species in one group of insects have escaped the hungry eye of predators by looking like foliage and moving like swaying leaves for at least 47 million years, a new fossil find suggests.