Five Things: Fall 2022

Art and science news you can use.

1

a flying bat

Everybody plays make-believe as a child, but for some animals pretending to be something else is not just a fun escape—it’s a matter of survival. Scientists discovered that the greater mouse-eared bat deceives predators by mimicking the buzzing sound of stinging insects like hornets, warding off owls that might otherwise eat them.


2

A beautiful photo of great smookey mountain national park

Global tourism plummeted because of COVID-19 shutdowns, but that didn’t stop people from enjoying the outdoors. Last year saw record crowds at some of the best-known parks in the United States, including the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, which led all national parks with more than 14 million visits in 2021.


3

An image showing mars with a weather report superimposed over it
The average temperature on Mars is -81 degrees Fahrenheit.


4

a mobile phone with an image of Warhol's painting of Marilyn Monroe

In May, Andy Warhol’s 1964 silk-screen Shot Sage Blue Marilyn sold for $195 million to an unknown buyer, making it the highest price achieved for any American work of art at auction.


5

A photo of an ancient tree

California wildfires are threatening some of the planet’s most ancient trees, including a bristlecone known as Methuselah, estimated to be the oldest in the world at 4,853 years. But fire isn’t the only threat to its top standing. Researchers in Chile this year discovered a Patagonian cypress that they estimate to be more than 5,000 years old, although scientists are divided over the legitimacy of that claim.