China’s Tianducheng Is an Eerie Ghost Town Version of Paris
If and when Shanghai spills far enough into the countryside, Tianducheng and its neo-Classical apartments will be waiting
Bats Act As Pest Control at Two Old Portuguese Libraries
It's not clear how long the bats have been doing this important job
China Has More Self-Made, Female Billionaires Than Any Other Country
Although most women in China now hold jobs and account for about 20 percent of the country's entrepreneurs, they are still largely subservient to men
Once a Toxoplasma Parasite Infects Mice, They Never Fear Cats Again
Toxoplasma is estimated to infect nearly one-third of humans worldwide, but what these results mean for humans remains to be seen
Women Can Now Map Street Harassment, One Catcall at a Time
Some, however, are doubtful that the app will actually enact any change
Legos Helped Restore a 3,000-Year-Old Sarcophagus
Lego platforms propped the sarcophagus in place from the inside, allowing the researchers to work on the ancient materials without fear of collapse
Bartending Robot Can Tell If a Customer Wants a Drink or Is Just Standing Around
Using videos of thirsty customers lining up for bar-side drinks, they created algorithm equivalents for "I want a drink" body language
Flies, Chipmunks And Other Tiny Creatures See the World in Slow Motion
Flies, for example, can perceive visual stimuli four times faster than we can
The AR-15 Seems To Be the Weapon of Chioce in Random Acts of Violence
Of the 67 mass shootings in the US over the past three decades, more than three-quarters of the 143 guns used were obtained legally
Google Earth Is Lending a Hand with Land Mine Clearing in Kosovo
Google has teemed with the Halo Trust, a non-profit that works to remove land mines and other unexploded ordinances that often linger after a conflict ends
Blue Whale Earwax Reveals Pollution Accumulated Over a Lifetime
Earwax collected from a beached whale shows that the creature ingested a host of toxins, such as DDT and mercury, throughout its life
Russia’s “Forest Boy” Says He Spent 16 Years in the Siberian Wilderness
The mysterious man claims to have never attended school, received any vaccinations and to have met only a few people throughout his life
Three Ancient Rivers, Long Buried by the Sahara, Created a Passage to the Mediterranean
One river system, called the Irharhar, appears to have been a particularly popular travel route, corroborated by both model simulations and artifacts
Eating Breakfast Probably Won’t Help You Lose Weight
As much as researchers themselves want to believe that breakfast helps people lose weight or keep it off, the evidence is far from conclusive
Watch This Woman Slowly Transform From Toddler to Elderly Woman
The idea behind Danielle, who is based on a real person, is "that something is happening but you can't see it but you can feel it, like aging itself"
Orangutans Plan And Share Their Routes Before Hitting the Road
The authors suspect that other great apes and species of intelligent animals likely use similar communication strategies
Google Street View Goes to the Galapagos
Follow in Darwin's footsteps, starting on San Cristobal Island and then venturing to Floreana Island and North Seymour Island
Elephants Can Distinguish Between the Growl of a Hungry Tiger And a Hungry Leopard
Farmers may be able to use growl-broadcasting, motion-triggered speakers to deter elephants from raiding their crops
Australia’s New Prime Minister Thinks Climate Science Is “Highly Contentious”
Tony Abbott's Liberal campaign slogan of "Chose real change" may turn out to be unsettlingly on the mark
Your Parents’ Music Will Be Stuck in Your Head Forever—And You’ll Like It
Deep down, new research finds, kids may be secretly enjoying themselves and creating fond attachments to oldies songs that still rock their parents out
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