Women’s Rights Monument in N.Y.C. Approved Amid Accusations of Whitewashing
The original design, which has since been altered, was criticized for minimizing the contributions of black suffrage leaders
Newly Public Letters Show Georgia O’Keeffe’s Quest for Independence
The Library of Congress has acquired a collection of letters from the artist to filmmaker Henwar Rodakiewicz
An Orangutan Was Shot 74 Times. She Survived.
Dubbed ‘Hope,’ the orangutan was blinded by gunshots to her eyes. She also sustained bone fractures and had been stabbed with a sharp tool.
Flooding in Midwest May Reach ‘Historic and Catastrophic’ Levels
Nebraska alone has sustained an estimated $1.4 billion in losses and damages
F.D.A. Approves First Drug for Treating Postpartum Depression
Brexanolone, which is administered intravenously, has been shown to work within 48 hours
There's a Three-Way Tie for World’s Most Expensive City
A new survey comparing the cost of more than 160 items in each city found that Paris, Singapore and Hong Kong were the priciest
Cyclone Idai Brings Death and Devastation to Southern Africa
‘Almost everything is destroyed,’ said an aid worker in the city of Beira, Mozambique
DNA From 200-Year-Old Pipe Links Enslaved Woman to Sierra Leone
A new genetic analysis suggests that certain artifacts can help descendants of enslaved people piece together their ancestral heritage
Bronze Age Irish ‘Bog Butter’ Is Actually Made From Dairy, Study Finds
It previously was not clear whether the strange swampy snack originated from milk or animal fats
Ministers From All 16 German States Agree to Move Forward With Restitution of Looted Treasures
Officials said they would collaborate with museums on researching and repatriating artifacts that were unlawfully taken during Germany’s colonial era
Hungry Otters Are Creating a Unique Archaeological Record
By bashing mussel shells onto stones, otters leave behind traces of their activity
Actors’ Brain Activity May Change When They Are in Character
A new study of actors' brain activity suggests that they may 'lose themselves' when performing
Home of Civil Rights Hero Medgar Evers Is Now a National Monument
Before his assassination in 1963, Evers led civil rights demonstrations and investigated racial violence in Mississippi
Newly Discovered Starry Dwarf Frogs Are Lone Species of an Ancient Lineage
The newly discovered ‘oddball frog’ species dwells in India’s Western Ghats, one of the hottest of the biodiversity hotspots
Woman Attacked by Jaguar at Arizona Zoo Says She Was ‘In the Wrong’
She had been trying to get a photo of the animal, which reached through its cage and clamped down on her arm
Newly Discovered Letters Show a Different Side of Mary, Queen of Scots
When she wasn’t embroiled in political strife and intrigue, Mary still had to deal with the daily practicalities of running a kingdom
The House That May Have Inspired ‘Wuthering Heights’ Is Up for Sale
A chamber in Ponden Hall bears similarity to the room where the narrator Lockwood passes a fitful night of sleep—and dreams of an ‘ice-cold’ ghost
New Dinosaur Species Found in Australia Reveals a ‘Lost World’
<i>Galleonosaurus dorisae</i> thrived in the now-vanished Australia-Antarctica rift
A Medieval Arabic Medical Text Was Translated Into Irish, Discovery Shows
Ibn Sīnā's <i>Canon of Medicine</i> was once a core part of the European medical curriculum
Humans Are Destroying Chimpanzee Culture
A new study has found that chimps living in areas of high human impact are 88 percent less likely to engage in certain learned behaviors
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