Molly Hanson

Molly Hanson

Molly Hanson is a Colorado-based writer. She writes stories about nature, climate change, religion, ritual, psychology, the occult, running, and politics.

Follow her on Twitter at @molly_f_hanson.

Help future Mars rovers better navigate the red planet's treacherous terrain.
Fighting materialized, virtual monsters can be cathartic in stressful and precarious times.
Artifacts uncovered in southeast Asia offer clues on early complex human cultures.
Scientists are befuddled by where the shark gets most of its food.
Scientists think an insect similar to the modern millipede crawled around Scotland 425 million years ago, making it the first-ever land-dweller.
Mathematicians studied 100 billion tweets to help computer algorithms better understand our colloquial digital communication.
These Jurassic predators resorted to cannibalism when hit with hard times, according to a deliciously rare discovery.
Google is probably wrong about your health condition.
Pups in puberty prefer not to listen to their owners.
Researchers think they know how a group of ancient sloths, who died thousands of years ago in Ecuador, met their untimely end.
A Cornell Health physician has blended rap and medicine to better educate kids on coronavirus guidelines.
Most homes are using insufficient methods to determine when chicken is done cooking and safe to eat.
Combining two fabrics is the best way to filter out infectious coronavirus particles according to a new study.
Researchers decoded the love signals of lizards "spoken" through chemical signals.
This unsettling simulation shows how mucus-mist can rapidly spread in a grocery store.
These pink feathered folk form complex social networks and are choosy about who they spend their time with, according to a new study.
A global brainstorming marathon is throwing together brilliant ideas from around the world to rapidly develop solutions to combat the coronavirus pandemic.
A team of scientists created a new type of robot inspired by an octopus, and it could be a major breakthrough in the field.
Researchers documented the most common negative side effects of smoking weed, and who might be most susceptible.
This video game designer's creations have been said to work "neurological magic."