Sid Perkins

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

All Stories by Sid Perkins

  1. Paleontology

    Young and Helpless: Fossils suggest that dinosaur parents cared

    Skeletal remains found in the fossilized eggs of an early dinosaur hint that adults of the species may have cared for their hatchlings.

  2. Archaeology

    Seeing Past the Dirt

    Increasingly, researchers are using geophysical techniques such as ground-penetrating radar and magnetometers to target their excavations.

  3. Earth

    Under Pressure: High-stress tests show surprising change in a mantle mineral’s behavior

    Compressing a common iron-bearing mineral to the pressures found deep within Earth makes the material much stiffer, which might explain why seismic waves travel particularly fast through some zones of rock.

  4. Earth

    Power-laden winds sweep North America

    There's more than enough wind power to satisfy the United States' energy requirements, a new analysis of weather data suggests.

  5. Earth

    Growth Slumps: Melting permafrost shapes Alaskan lakes

    A new model suggests that some fast-growing, egg-shaped lakes in Alaska expand when their permafrost banks melt and slump in tiny landslides.

  6. Earth

    Volcanic Hot Spots

    Many geophysical studies, including analyses of deep-traveling seismic waves and computer simulations of flowing molten rock deep beneath Earth's crust, are providing evidence that mantle plumes actually exist.

  7. Earth

    Antarctica’s gaining ice in some spots

    Large portions of Antarctica are storing more snowfall than they once did.

  8. Paleontology

    Killer Bite: Ancient, tiny mammal probably used venom

    Paleontologists have unearthed the remains of an ancient, mouse-size mammal that seems to have had a venomous bite.

  9. Earth

    Wetland Blanket: Volcanic sulfates may curb methane emission

    Field studies hint that the deposition on wetlands of sulfate compounds from the atmosphere could temporarily stifle those regions' natural emissions of methane.

  10. Paleontology

    Newfound dinosaur wasn’t sticking its neck out

    Fossils of a new, 10-meter-long sauropod species excavated in South America suggest that, unlike most of its massive kin, the creature had a relatively short neck.

  11. Earth

    Icy Heat: Satellites look at heat flow through Antarctica’s crust

    Using satellite observations of Earth's magnetic field, scientists can estimate the amount of heat flowing upward through Earth's surface under kilometers-thick ice.

  12. Earth

    Seismic noise can yield maps of Earth’s crust

    The small, random, and nearly constant seismic waves that travel in all directions through Earth's crust can be used to make ultrasoundlike images of geologic features within the crust.