Lin-Manuel Miranda Teams Up With Google to Digitize Puerto Rico's Art
The devastation of Hurricane Maria highlighted the importance of preserving the island's cultural treasures
Two Traps Where Woolly Mammoths Were Driven to Their Deaths Found in Mexico
The discovery may offer rare evidence that humans were actively hunting the great creatures
The Controversial Resurrection of James Dean
In a move broadly decried as distasteful, filmmakers plan on digitally resurrecting the actor for a new role on the silver screen
London Library Spotlights Nazi Persecution of the Roma and Sinti
The Roma and Sinti's wartime suffering "isn't necessarily a subject that people know that much about," says the curator of a new London show
How to Watch Mercury’s Rare Transit Across the Sun
Step one: Protect your eyes
Using Drone-Mounted Lasers, Scientists Find Ancient Bead-Making, Island-Dwelling Community in Florida
Archaeologists used LiDAR to spot a large settlement, where residents produced an important pre-Columbian commodity
A Victorian Property Featured in an Iconic Norman Rockwell Painting Is Now on Sale
The building is depicted in "Home for Christmas," which captures the holiday season in Rockwell’s hometown
A Historic Boat, Stuck Above Niagara Falls Since 1918, Finally Breaks Free
But the vessel’s joyride didn’t last long; it is now lodged in a new location some 160 feet downriver
Thieves Ram Into Medieval French Cathedral, Making Off With Trove of Relics
The suspects reportedly battered down the door of the Unesco World Heritage Site using a tree trunk strapped to a car
Hungry Goats Helped Save the Reagan Library From a California Wildfire
Some heroes wear capes, others like to eat flammable weeds
A Maryland Community Gathered to Remember the Lynching of George Peck
Montgomery County residents collected soil from the site where Peck was dragged to his death in 1880
One-Ton Boulder Returned to Arizona National Forest Following Brazen Theft
The thief (or thieves) likely used heavy machinery to commit the crime
Crabs Can Learn to Navigate Mazes, Too
A new study highlights the cognitive abilities of an understudied animal
Chinese Province Closes All of Its Glass Bridges Amid Safety Concerns
Heart-stopping glass structures have become a craze in China, but some have been linked to injuries and fatalities
Fire Ravages Japanese Heritage Site Shuri Castle
The castle, first built more than 500 years ago, was seen as a symbol of the dynamic Ryukyu Kingdom
Hold On to Your Lederhosen: Oktoberfest Produces a Whole Lot of Methane Gas
Incomplete combustion from gas appliances is likely the major culprit
A Minnesota Museum’s Creepy Doll Contest Is Here to Haunt Your Dreams
"The doll I disdain handling is the one with human hair," says curator Dan Nowakowski
Babies May Understand Counting Before They Fully Understand Numbers
By tempting an adorable pool of subjects with toys, a new study found that infants associate counting with quantities
NYC Monument Will Honor African-American Family Displaced to Make Way for Central Park
But the project has drawn criticism, particularly because the monument will stand some 20 blocks north of Seneca Village's historic location
New York’s Last Fire Watchtower Has Been Restored
Built in the 1850s, the structure was once part of the city's fire-fighting network
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