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Discover Jan 2000
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Features
100 Years That Changed Everything About Physics
Astronomy, Chemistry, Genetics, Anthropology, And Medicine.
The Most Amazing Century Of Science

 


Discover Feb 2000
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Features
How Stars Get Their Names
3-D Fax Machines
The Science Of Beauty
Are Good Looks Nature's Ultimate Survival Strategy?

 


Discover Mar 2000
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Features
Making Mummies / New Headache Research
Your Field Guide To The New Planets
So Far, We Know Of At Least 29, But There May Be Billions
Plus: Where Did Greenland's Vikings Go?

 


Discover Apr 2000
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Features
How Old Is Too Old To Have A Baby?
Rome's Lost Ships
Buried For 2,000 Years, A Treasure Trove Of Ancient Freighters Offers
A Rare Peek At Life During The Empire's Glory Days

 


Discover May 2000
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Features
The New Math Of Gambling / Fat Genes
Big The Story Of The Universe Began With A Colossal Explosion.
Now A Magnificent Space Probe Will Tell Us How It All Ends Bang
Are Apes More Like Us Than We Thought?

 


Discover Jun 2000
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Features
Digging For Dinosaurs In All The Wrong Places
Smart Pills: Suppose You Could Remember Everything
What In The World Is Wrong With Our Weather?
Can You Say Global Warming?

 


Discover Jul 2000
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Features
And The Winners Of The 11th Discover Awards Are...
Target Earth Why Scientists Are Rushing To Crack The Mystery Of The Norhtern Lights
Aurora Borealis Image In X Rays Captured By The Orbiting Polar Spacecraft
A Special Report From Poker Flat, Alaska

 


Discover Aug 2000
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Features
The Huge Asteroid That Cratered The Hudson Valley
Stressed - Out Children: Why Parents Matter More Than Peers
Anti - Gravity In Pisa
Do Parasites Rule The World?

 


Discover Sep 2000
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Features
The USA's High-Tech Edge At The Olympics
The Last Planet? Extraordinary Neptune, Where It Rains Diamonds
What Did Dinosaurs Really Look Like?
Robots That Mimic Life-Forms Downloading Your Body

 


Discover Oct 2000
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Features
Special Collector's Issue
Twentieth Anniversary Issue
October 2000

 


Discover Nov 2000
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Features
Dirigibles Fly Again
King Midas Last Feast
The Mystery Of Multiple Universes
Is Ours The Only One With Life?

 


Discover Dec 2000
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Features
Get Ready For Computers That Talk
Does Time Really Exist?
Why Physicists Secretly Hope The Passage Of Time Is Just An Illusion
Our Water Pollution Solution: Weird Algae

 

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Discover is an American general audience science magazine launched in October 1980 by Time Inc. It has been owned by Kalmbach Publishing since 2010.

Discover was created primarily through the efforts of Time magazine editor Leon Jaroff. He noticed that magazine sales jumped every time the cover featured a science topic. Jaroff interpreted this as a considerable public interest in science, and in 1971, he began agitating for the creation of a science-oriented magazine. This was difficult, as a former colleague noted, because "Selling science to people who graduated to be managers was very difficult".

Jaroff's persistence finally paid off, and Discover magazine published its first edition in 1980. Discover was originally launched into a burgeoning market for science magazines aimed at educated non-professionals, intended to be easier to read than Scientific American but more detailed and science-oriented than Popular Science. Shortly after its launch, the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) launched a similar magazine called Science 80 (not to be confused with its flagship academic journal, Science), and both Science News and Science Digest changed their formats to follow the new trend.

During this period, Discover featured fairly in-depth science reporting on "hard science" and avoided fringe topics like extraterrestrial intelligence. Most issues contained essays by well-known scientists—such as Stephen Jay Gould, Jared Diamond, and Stephen Hawking. Another common article was a biography, often linked with mentions of other scientists working in the field. The "Skeptical Eye" column sought to uncover pop-science scams, and was the medium where James Randi released the results of Project Alpha. Jaroff said that it was the most-read section at its launch.

The sudden appearance of so many magazines in the same market space inevitably led to some falling by the wayside, and Discover was left largely alone in its market space by the mid-1980s; it nevertheless decided to appeal to a wider audience by including articles on psychology and psychiatry. Jaroff told the editor-in-chief that these were not "solid sciences", and was sent back to Discover's parent, Time, Inc. "Skeptical Eye" and other columns disappeared, and articles covered more controversial, speculative topics (like "How the Universe Will End"). The new format was a great success, and the new format remained largely unchanged for the next two decades.

Gilbert Rogin, a Sports Illustrated editor, was brought in 1985 to revive Discover. In 1986, Time purchased the subscription lists of the shuttered magazines Science Digest and Science 86 from their publishers. Circulation for the magazine reached 925,000 by May 1987 with revenue for 1986 being $6.9 million, but annual net loss was $10 million.

In January 1987, Time appointed a new Discover publisher, Bruce A. Barnet, previously publisher of Picture Week test magazine from August 1985 to replace James B. Hayes, who was appointed publisher of Fortune.

The magazine changed hands several times. In 1987, Time, Inc. sold Discover to Family Media, the owners of Health, Golf Illustrated, Homeowner, 1,001 Home Ideas and World Tennis, for $26 million. From January to July 1991, Discover magazine lost 15% of its advertising while still remaining profitable. Family Media closed down while suspending publication of all its magazines and placing them up for sale. Family Media's last Discover issue was August 1991, with a circulation of 1.1 million copies.

In September 1991, The Walt Disney Company bought the magazine for its Disney Publishing's Magazine Group. The magazine's main office was moved to the Magazine Group office in Burbank while leaving one third behind in New York in a small editorial and advertising office. Disney was able to retain Family Media's editor-in-chief for the magazine, Paul Hoffman. Disney doubled the magazine's photography and its content budget to overcome skipping two issues in Family Media's shutdown and ownership change. In 1993, Disney Magazine Publishing Inc. decided to launch a trade advertising campaign designed with advertising firm Ziff Marketing to raise awareness in the advertising field that the magazine is an accessible general interest magazine in the science category.

In October 2005, Bob Guccione, Jr., founder of Spin and Gear magazines, and some private equity partners purchased the magazine from Disney. Guccione served as CEO and oversaw a redesign for the April 2006 issue. However, Guccione was ousted as CEO in October 2007 in what was described as "a falling-out over philosophical differences with his financial backers". Henry Donahue, Discover Media's chief financial officer, became the new CEO. In 2008, he also assumed the role of publisher. In October 2008, Corey Powell, Discover's executive editor, became editor-in-chief. As of April 2009, the magazine published combined issues in January/February and July/August, for a total of ten issues a year.

In 2010 the magazine was sold to Kalmbach Publishing, whose books and magazines are generally about craft and hobby subjects such as modeling (Model Railroader, FineScale Modeler, Scale Auto, Classic Toy Trains, Garden Railways, Model Retailer), beadwork (BeadStyle, Bead&Button, Art Jewelry), and the outdoors (Birder’s World, Cabin Life, American Snowmobiler). It has one other science magazine, Astronomy. In August 2012 Kalmbach announced that Discover would be moving from New York City to Kalmbach's headquarters in Wisconsin in January 2013. In December 2012, Stephen C. George became the editor-in-chief. Becky Lang was the editor-in-chief until mid-2020.

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