Issues Muse Magazine

Emily Johnson
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issues muse magazine

Each digital issue of the mUse magazine is a curated editorial experience designed to inspire, inform, and connect. Inside the pages, you’ll find thoughtful features, founder spotlights, creative perspectives, and real stories from women who are shaping how they live and work. After purchase, you’ll receive instant access via email. Digital issues can be read online anytime and accessed from desktop, tablet, or mobile - making it easy to return to your favorite stories whenever you need them. Choose a single issue or subscribe for ongoing access to current and future digital editions. Each print subscription includes four (4) consecutive print issues, starting with the most recent issue.After all four issues have been delivered, a new subscription purchase is required to continue receiving future print editions.

Flip through a free preview of Issue No. 1: Be Inspired and experience the heart of our very first magazine — thoughtful features, beautiful design, and stories meant to inspire. You don’t have to be an adult to appreciate the most cutting-edge discoveries in modern science. Future engineers, inventors, biologists, and other curious kids ages 9-14 will delight in MUSE magazine’s unabashedly off-the-wall articles! With quirky humor, enthralling articles, and striking photos and cartoons, MUSE has something for everyone. Explore topics ranging from zombies to AI to the science of dreams to the history of ghost-hunting.

How are crop circles formed? How does Bitcoin work? Can animals have autism? Try hands-on experiments, spot the fake news articles, participate in Citizen Science, and follow the time-warping comic adventures at Parallel U! Meet real scientists in every field, explore the wonder of math in Ivars Peterson’s monthly column, and avoid the hot pink bunnies that infest the fan mail page! Since 1997, MUSE has provided the highest quality STEAM (that’s science, technology, engineering, arts, and math) content for kids who love to learn.

Here are the links to the PDFs of all the print issues of MUSE that are available: And here are the links to our previous web issues: by LAURA MARIE CIEPLIK and JAVIER DE PARDO by JUERGEN TELLER, DOVILE DRIZYTE and MARCO VAN DEN HOVE SIMONA KUST by LEE MARY MANNING and ELISSA SANTISI KRISTINE LINDSETH by RORY VAN MILLINGEN and DIMITRI RIVIERE

DIANE KRUGER by CHRIS COLLS and ELISSA SANTISI Kids who can't help wondering whether video games really kill their brain cells, or what a gentleman ladybug is called, will find the answers here, in articles written by award-winning authors and accompanied by... MUSE is perfect for any kid interested in science, history, and the arts. Grades 5-9 Dear Muse Readers (aka Musers), For almost three decades, Muse magazine has been your window into science and the arts. It has brought the voices and perspectives of scientists and experts to topics of interest to younger readers.

Our dedicated team of writers, photographers, illustrators, and staffers has enjoyed sharing that beyond ideas, science and related fields are adventurous human endeavors. Our own journey is entering a new chapter. Starting in September, you will receive a new, expanded version of Cricket magazine. It will include the feature articles and departments—including the “Parallel U” comic—that you’ve come to expect from Muse. As part of this exciting change, Muse will no longer be a standalone magazine. The new magazine will also include short stories, poems, and comics from Cricket; historical and biographical…

LETTER of the MONTH Splish Splash My name is Claire. I am 13 years old and live in North Dakota. I am a competitive swimmer for the Mandan Marlins Swim Club. I was wondering if you could do an article on competitive swimming and the science connected with it. Like how drag affects speed, as well as how great an exercise it is, especially in the winter. I really enjoyed watching the Olympics last summer, which were in Paris.

Especially the swimming and diving. They’re probably my favorites, but gymnastics is really cool, too. That’s not all that I watched, but those are my favorite sports. I have gotten Muse for two and a half-ish years now. I am writing multiple books of my own, so are some… >> INSECTS Butterfly Numbers Have Fallen in the United States Who doesn’t love to see a butterfly flutter by?

But this experience could become rarer in the years ahead. According to a new, large study, butterfly populations are down 22 percent over a 20-year period in the United States. The biggest drops were noted in the Southwest. The results have alarmed scientists. Butterflies don’t just look pretty; they pollinate plants and crops, playing an important role in our ecosystems. A third of butterfly species studied showed large declines, while only three percent of species gained in numbers.

The factors blamed for the downturn are shrinking habitats, climate change, and the growing use of pesticides since the 1990s. What if anything can be done? We can start by creating butterfly-friendly gardens… In 2024, more than 8,000 wildfires tore through California. They burned an area larger than the state of Rhode Island. In 2024, wildfires across the United States burned about 2.4 times more land than they did 41 years earlier, when records were first kept.

What’s making so many places go up in smoke? A WARMING PLANET Climate change plays a big part in the increase in wildfires. The Earth is getting warmer. Human activity such as burning oil and gas creates greenhouse gases. Like a blanket, these gases trap heat in the Earth’s atmosphere. The average global temperature is about 2 degrees Fahrenheit (more than one degree Celsius) higher now than in 1880.

This warming trend has a big effect on what experts call the fire triangle. Fires need three… How art forces us to stare into the eyes of women through the eyes of men You are more like Glinda than you think. Why the “comfort” show is such a staple in our lives. An amalgamation of electronic music, eco-art, and innovation, Cloud 9 Festival, a No.9 Project, unfurls its magic from September 8 to 10, 2023.

Featuring three unapologetically queer models, this shoot captures the power, love, and affection shared between queer individuals, unwavering despite the struggles we face.

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Each Digital Issue Of The MUse Magazine Is A Curated

Each digital issue of the mUse magazine is a curated editorial experience designed to inspire, inform, and connect. Inside the pages, you’ll find thoughtful features, founder spotlights, creative perspectives, and real stories from women who are shaping how they live and work. After purchase, you’ll receive instant access via email. Digital issues can be read online anytime and accessed from deskt...

Flip Through A Free Preview Of Issue No. 1: Be

Flip through a free preview of Issue No. 1: Be Inspired and experience the heart of our very first magazine — thoughtful features, beautiful design, and stories meant to inspire. You don’t have to be an adult to appreciate the most cutting-edge discoveries in modern science. Future engineers, inventors, biologists, and other curious kids ages 9-14 will delight in MUSE magazine’s unabashedly off-th...

How Are Crop Circles Formed? How Does Bitcoin Work? Can

How are crop circles formed? How does Bitcoin work? Can animals have autism? Try hands-on experiments, spot the fake news articles, participate in Citizen Science, and follow the time-warping comic adventures at Parallel U! Meet real scientists in every field, explore the wonder of math in Ivars Peterson’s monthly column, and avoid the hot pink bunnies that infest the fan mail page! Since 1997, MU...

Here Are The Links To The PDFs Of All The

Here are the links to the PDFs of all the print issues of MUSE that are available: And here are the links to our previous web issues: by LAURA MARIE CIEPLIK and JAVIER DE PARDO by JUERGEN TELLER, DOVILE DRIZYTE and MARCO VAN DEN HOVE SIMONA KUST by LEE MARY MANNING and ELISSA SANTISI KRISTINE LINDSETH by RORY VAN MILLINGEN and DIMITRI RIVIERE

DIANE KRUGER By CHRIS COLLS And ELISSA SANTISI Kids Who

DIANE KRUGER by CHRIS COLLS and ELISSA SANTISI Kids who can't help wondering whether video games really kill their brain cells, or what a gentleman ladybug is called, will find the answers here, in articles written by award-winning authors and accompanied by... MUSE is perfect for any kid interested in science, history, and the arts. Grades 5-9 Dear Muse Readers (aka Musers), For almost three deca...