Dinosaur skulls had many cavities and openings, some of which may have held blood vessels to help cool off the animals' heads
Housing more than 150,000 written works, Gladstone's Library is the only residential library in Great Britain
William Stimpson created a fraternity of young scientists and named it for an extinct North American sloth
The Mustansiriya has withstood centuries of war, floods and architectural butchery, but can it survive its own restoration?
From robots to digitized recordings, farmers are upping their game when it comes to protecting their crops
Smithsonian paleontologist Hans Sues reveals some of his tips for finding and excavating a Mesozoic monster
Breaking down how the gene editing technology is being used, for the first time in the United States, to treat patients with severe medical conditions
From sunflower spirals to schooling fish, renewable energy innovators are uncovering ideas for improving efficiency and output in natural phenomena
As temperatures rise and ice melts, Norse and Inuit artifacts and human remains decompose more rapidly
Even centuries before Captain Cook’s arrival, its resources were exploited by outsiders
The idea for the timeless toy sprung to mind when Naval engineer Richard James dropped some coiled wires
Marine archaeologists exploring the 19th-century vessel could discover clues about what befell the sailors of the Franklin expedition
The cranium of a male <i>Australopithecus anamensis</i>, a close relative of Lucy, provides clues about one of the earliest hominins to walk on two legs
See the remnants and relics of key routes between Venice and St. Petersburg for transporting amber through the ancient world
A new show at the Smithsonian American Art Museum reflects on iconic events including JFK's assassination, flag raising at Iwo Jima and Custer's last stand
Was his close friendship with William Rufus King just that, or was it evidence that he was the nation's first gay chief executive?
A remnant from a meal long gone, the find in British Columbia could give the region's indigenous communities an important legal claim
Curator Anna Phillips is on a quest to make leeches less repulsive to the public
Bioengineers at Harvard’s Wyss Institute showcase their ingenious medical, industrial and environmental designs at the Cooper Hewitt
New research shows that water flowing over thin layers of rust can generate power
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