The iBrailler Notes app provides the blind and visually impaired with a Braille writer at an affordable price
Travelers are discovering the Ming dynasty's own Indiana Jones, an adventurer who dedicated his life to exploring his country's Shangri-Las
How hungry Mexican free-tails sabotage the competition
These tiny corridors around the world invite you in with their charm and surprising level of bustle
Fifty years after its grand opening, the spectre of the Houston stadium still looms large
Daniel Beltra's aerial photographs reveal the human impact on nature
Taste the food life on the Via Margutta, once home to Fellini and since 1953, the scene of Americans' sweetest Roman Holiday
You asked, we answered
A high-tech recreation of the immortal artworks shines a new light on the dawn of human imagination
Now that the ship that the Frenchman took on his 1780 trip to America has been rebuilt, its time to revisit his role in history
Even if only a small percentage of current farmland became wild meadows, it could bring populations back to previous levels
The doctors who announced the first successful procedure last week had a particularly difficult time finding willing organ donors
Using thermodynamic sensors, the iTBra could one day screen for breast cancer, but experts are wary
It's not just the flash and style, either—electric engines emit less heat than gas ones and could combat the urban heat island effect
The sun may power most of our world—but some things come alive only at night
Bekoji, a small town in the Ethiopian highlands, has produced five Olympic champions in the past ten years
A newly discovered crocodilian ancestor was a nine-foot-tall predator that stood on its hind legs
Thousands of new images help preserve the art form
A burst of particles from the sun is hitting our atmosphere and lighting up the night as far south as Illinois
Before green came on the scene, blue was the color associated with the Saint and the Emerald Isle
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