Quanta And The Transmitter Writers Win AAAS Kavli Gold Awards For Science Journalism

Kavli Foundation Logo
The geometric logo of the Kavli Foundation.
McMurray won the Gold Award in the Small Outlet category for her story "A Scientific Fraud. An Investigation. A Lab in Recovery. " The piece explores the fallout of a scientist falsifying data, examining the impact not only on the scientist's career but also on those affected by the fraud.
"We wanted to chronicle the emotional and existential consequences the fraud has on the bystanders," McMurray says. "To do that, many scientists had to talk to me about one of the hardest days of their lives. I am so grateful for their bravery and candor, and for the empathetic insight of my editor Brady Huggett."
Levy received the Gold Award in the Magazine category for "The Hidden World of Electrostatic Ecology," a detailed account of how small organisms use static electricity to their advantage. Quanta biology editor Hannah Waters worked with Levy and the Quanta art department to convey the basic science of the topic - from the static charge on honeybee wings to the electric fields on spider webs - through words, infographics and illustration. The piece also tells a human story about how following curiosity leads to scientific understanding.
"It's hard for us to imagine what the world feels like at the smallest scales inhabited by insects," Levy says. "I was so fascinated to learn about how forces we normally consider weak are actually strong enough to perhaps influence evolution."
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