Well-Preserved Brain Cells Found in Vesuvius Victim
The volcanic eruption transformed the young man's neural tissue into glass
Hundreds of Native American Treaties Digitized for the First Time
The National Archives has scanned more than 300 agreements between the United States and Indigenous tribes
Machu Picchu Reopens for a Single Stranded Tourist
Jesse Katayama, 26, waited seven months for his chance to see the mountainous 15th-century Inca settlement
World Food Program Wins 2020 Nobel Peace Prize
This year's award seeks to highlight the need for global solidarity in a time of crisis, says prize committee chair Berit Reiss-Andersen
American Poet Louise Glück Wins Nobel Prize in Literature
The esteemed writer and teacher previously won the 1993 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry
Ancient Roman Villa Discovered Beneath Italian Apartment Complex
Come November, the 2,000-year-old dwelling will open as a multimedia museum
Archaeologists Unearth Foundations of One of the Nation's Oldest Black Churches
A dig in the heart of Colonial Williamsburg revealed sections of the First Baptist Church, which was founded in 1776
Mellon Foundation Pledges $250 Million to Reinvent America's Monuments
The organization's five-year campaign will support the creation of new public works and the reimagining of ones already standing
Newly Unearthed Warrior's Grave Poised to Redraw Map of Anglo-Saxon England
Nicknamed the "Marlow Warlord," the six-foot-tall man was buried on a hill overlooking the Thames sometime in the sixth century A.D.
Historic Brooklyn Cemetery Appoints Its First Artist-in-Residence
Green-Wood is the final resting place of Jean-Michel Basquiat and Louis Comfort Tiffany, among others
Listen to a Lost Ella Fitzgerald Recording
In 1962, the singer returned to Berlin to reprise a famous 1960 concert. The tapes were forgotten—until now
Some of Edward Hopper's Earliest Paintings Are Copies of Other Artists' Work
Curator Kim Conaty says a new study "cuts straight through the widely held perception of Hopper as an American original"
Venture Down a VR Rabbit Hole With This Free 'Alice in Wonderland' Tour
The Victoria and Albert Museum will host a free, Lewis Carroll-inspired virtual reality experience on October 22
Curly the Curling Robot Can Beat the Pros at Their Own Game
An AI-powered robot was able to beat professional curling teams 3-out-of-4 times, a new study shows
Fredericksburg's Slave Auction Block Will Be Moved to a Museum
Curators plan on preserving graffiti added by Black Lives Matter protesters
Earth May Soon Get Another Mini-Moon, but It's Probably Just a Piece of Space Trash
It could be an asteroid—or, as one astronomer suggests, it could be a rocket booster from the 1960s
A Dutch Museum Will Display All 150,000 Objects in Its Collections
The Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen's unique storage facility is slated to open in fall 2021
Hundreds of Whales Die in Mass Stranding in Australia
Nearly 500 pilot whales were stranded off the coast of Tasmania last week, in what officials say is the largest mass stranding event in Australian history
Researchers Identify Mexican Wreck as 19th-Century Maya Slave Ship
Spanish traders used the steamboat to transport enslaved Indigenous individuals to Cuba
Historic Mount Wilson Observatory Threatened by Bobcat Fire in Los Angeles
Although the immediate danger seems to have passed, the fight to battle the flames threatening the historic observatory continues
Page 16 of 24