In 1097, a Pueblo artist may have etched a rare celestial event into the rock for all of posterity
Before hipsters descended on your local thrift store, repurposing discarded goods was a subversive art form
Bugs use their feces for weapons, navigation and gardening. Can we tap into this poop party?
In turn, the peace talks that ended the war had an enormous impact on China's future
Smithsonian acquires priceless emblems of America's national pastime
Those who misuse aquatic antibiotics are playing a dangerous game with their health, doctors and veterinarians say
A spill of bioactive ink made from ovarian cells led to the creation of paper made from organs and tissues, with various potential medical uses
Every summer, writer Boris Fishman returns to Flathead Lake, a pristine spot in northwestern Montana, for rest and reflection
Paper, the gramophone, double-entry bookkeeping, and barbed wire all make the list
Newly minted abolitionist Amos Adams Lawrence funneled much of his fortune into a battle he thought America couldn’t afford to lose
A tiny sensor mounted to eyeglasses can track eye blinks, allowing communication from locked-in patients
It's a challenge to attribute any one storm or heat wave to climate change, but scientists are getting closer
The Chamorro people of this Pacific island have long been buffeted by the crosswinds of foreign nations
Cavern Grotto, a new restaurant in Arizona, opens inside the largest dry cavern system in the country
You may have heard that Finnish scientists had made food from electricity, but the truth is more complicated
The melting mammal was part of Amarula and WildlifeDIRECT’s “Don’t Let Them Disappear” campaign
Why drugging and caging the cats for Tinder photos is even more messed up than it sounds
Overlooked by historians, Benjamin Lay was one of the nation's first radicals to argue for an end to slavery
Eleanor Roosevelt's war time travels to support U.S. soldiers were considerable: in the Pacific theater, she would meet with 400,000 troops
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