Australian Firefighters Have Saved the Last Groves of a Rare, Prehistoric Tree
Just 200 Wollemi pines exist in a remote gorge, prompting a critical operation to protect them from bushfires
Human Body Temperature Is Getting Cooler, Study Finds
Our average normal temperature may no longer be 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit
Forensic Artist Betty Pat Gatliff, Whose Facial Reconstructions Helped Solve Crimes, Dies at 89
With her detailed reconstructions of missing persons and murder victims, Gatliff helped give identities to the nameless dead
Fishing Hooks Pose a Long-Term Threat to Tiger Sharks
A new study found that 38 percent of tiger sharks observed off the coast of Tahiti had at least one hook stuck in their body
A New Holocaust Museum Is Coming to the Netherlands, With Help From Germany
Germany has pledged €4 million to a project that seeks to revamp the National Holocaust Museum in Amsterdam
Cows Communicate With Unique Moos
A new study has found that the animals use distinct vocalizations across a range of emotional contexts
You Can Now Download Images of 100,000 Artworks From Prominent Paris Museums' Collections
Paris Musées, which manages 14 important institutions, has released a trove of images into the public domain
Watch the Spectacular Eruption of One of Mexico’s Most Active Volcanoes
Officials say no one was hurt in the explosion. But over in the Philippines, a brewing eruption in threatens to be more severe
Plants Are Now Sprouting High in Himalayas as the Planet Warms
Just what this means for the fragile mountain ecosystem is unclear, but researchers say the need to find out is 'urgent'
Artwork Discovered in Vienna Cathedral's Gift Shop May Be the Work of German Renaissance Master Albrecht Dürer
The find is particularly intriguing because it represents the first evidence that Dürer visited the Austrian city
Why the Dutch Government Wants You to Stop Referring to the Netherlands as 'Holland'
In a push to redirect tourists to other parts of the country, officials are dropping "Holland" from promotional and marketing materials
Remembering June Bacon-Bercey, a Pioneering African American Meteorologist
She is believed to be the first African American woman with meteorological training to deliver weather news on TV
More Than One Billion Animals Have Been Killed in Australia’s Wildfires, Scientist Estimates
Some researchers believe the number could be ‘a very conservative figure’
Did Over-Hunting Walruses Fuel the Collapse of Norse Greenland?
A new study has found that Norse hunters began pursuing smaller animals at increasingly risky distances in "a classic pattern of resource depletion"
Iconic Puerto Rico Landmark Collapses in Earthquake
Punta Ventana, a natural stone archway, fell amid a spate of earthquakes that have been rattling the island
Remains of Japanese-American Internment Camp Detainee Found on California Mountain
In 1945, Giichi Matsumura set off for the Sierra Nevada mountains. He never came back
Can Scientists Protect North Atlantic Right Whales by Counting Them From Space?
A new collaboration between the New England Aquarium and the engineering firm Draper seeks to use satellite sonar and radar data to create a global watch
Emily Hale Was T.S. Eliot's Confidante—and More, Suggest Newly Unsealed Letters
Despite Eliot’s assertions to the contrary, the letters point to a passionate love between the duo
Will Love Bloom Between Two Sloths at the National Zoo?
Keepers are gradually introducing Athena, who made her debut at the zoo in December, to fellow two-toed sloth Vlad. Sparks have not flown—yet
Archaeologists Excavate 200 More Chinese Terracotta Warriors
The clay figures are part of the vast subterranean army built to protect the formidable emperor Qin Shi Huang in the afterlife
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