Leo Goldberger will never forget how his fellow Danes kept him safe, but the reaction to today’s refugee crisis gives him pause about his former homeland
When the National Transportation Safety Board office in Alaska first hears about a plane going down, protocol is to begin gathering information
The oddball fossil that puzzled experts for almost 60 years is probably an ancient fish akin to today's bloodsucking lampreys
Long used in agriculture, land managers are now wondering whether cooking weeds to death is better than pesticides
With nearly 200 different routes and 17,000 vertical feet of terrain, Ouray Ice Park is a haven for ice climbers and the "ice farmers" who bring it to life
The Texas rat snake was just as much of a speed demon as deadly vipers, challenging long-held notions about snake adaptations
In part fed by discredited and racist theories about race, scientists and amateurs alike looked to human remains to learn more about themselves
The ambitious museum looks at where humankind is headed—and asks how they'll live in a post-climate-change world
Research groups are developing robots, fabrics and furniture that could lead to energy savings
Once thought to exist only in Namibia, circles spotted 6,200 miles away are helping sort out how these odd features form
The horse-sized dino species had smarts and a keen sense of smell, setting the stage for the evolution of the enormous predator
Real-time online activity could provide speedier assessments as disaster unfolds than tools currently used by the government agency
Journey to the Center of Earth
New evidence about a devastating quake in 1812 hints that the San Jacinto fault may be a bigger seismic risk than anyone thought
The device, filled with human heart cells, could dramatically reduce the time it takes to test new drugs and end testing on animals
Jill Pelto, an artist and scientist, incorporates graphs of rising sea levels and soaring temperatures in her artwork
“Hurlyburly” is artist Orly Genger’s latest woven creation
The Bristol Old Vic’s thunder run hasn’t been used since 1942
Buzz pollination is a special technique for dislodging pollen from certain types of plants - and bumble bees are among the few species of bee capable of it
Journey to the Center of Earth
Flyover Country uses maps and geology databases to identify features of the landscape as a plane flies over them, no Wifi necessary
A collision with a large object may have triggered changes deep inside the planet that ultimately affected its atmosphere
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