Maps of Two Cicada Broods, Reunited After 221 Years
Brood XIII and Brood XIX are making their first dual appearance since 1803.
By Jonathan Corum
Jonathan Corum is the science graphics editor for The New York Times.
His reporting has brought him from the Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica to the tunnels of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN.
He joined The Times in 2005 and has a degree in Art and East Asian Studies from Yale College.
Brood XIII and Brood XIX are making their first dual appearance since 1803.
By Jonathan Corum
On April 8, the moon will cast a shadow across much of North America.
By Jonathan Corum
The Supreme Court justice has built a network of former clerks who share messages, meals and a common vision — wielding influence at universities, law firms and the highest rungs of government.
By Abbie VanSickle and Steve Eder
Beijing is investing heavily in the modernization of Lop Nur, a sprawling military site where it long detonated atom bombs and thermonuclear warheads.
By William J. Broad, Chris Buckley and Jonathan Corum
On Saturday, Oct. 14, an annular or “ring of fire” solar eclipse will sweep across much of the Western Hemisphere.
By Jonathan Corum
Many of the birds that spend their summers in the United States are preparing to fly south. Here’s where they’re headed — and why it matters.
By Emily Anthes
Images from India’s Chandrayaan-3 spacecraft, Vikram lander and Pragyan rover.
By Jonathan Corum
This was featured in live coverage.
By Kenneth Chang and Jonathan Corum
Six decades of crashes, belly flops and hard landings on the lunar surface.
By Jonathan Corum
The Times reviewed 101 studies of medication abortion, spanning continents and decades. All concluded that the pills are a safe method for terminating a pregnancy.
By Amy Schoenfeld Walker, Jonathan Corum, Malika Khurana and Ashley Wu