Researchers suggest the practice was a response to Spanish conquistadors' desecration of the remains
Journalist Dan Saladino's new book is a plea to save the planet's most endangered crops and culinary traditions
The finding is good news if it means the porpoises are staying safe, but it is bad if they are losing habitat in the process
A new book details the lives of Melisende of Jerusalem, Zumurrud of Damascus and their powerful peers
The story of Evette Peters is bolstered by the Anacostia Community Museum's research into Washington D.C.'s local neighborhoods and urban waterways
National Audio Company is the largest manufacturer in the world for this retro sound
Fed up with the lies and anti-Semitism, a California businessman partnered with a lawyer to prove that the murder of 6 million Jews was established fact
Scientists are sourcing new ultraviolet ray-blocking compounds from algae, seaweed, cyanobacteria and other marine creatures
In July 1776, colonists destroyed a sculpture of the English king. A new exhibit explores this iconoclasm's legacy—and its implications for today
The genetic factor that plays a large role in determining canine body size was around thousands of years prior to domestication
Historic artifacts meet 21st-century technology in a blockbuster touring exhibition centered on the 19th-Dynasty pharaoh
Scheduled to open this year are new institutions dedicated to African American history, electronic music and Nordic art
On January 28, 1922, the Knickerbocker Theatre's snow-covered roof collapsed, killing 98 people and injuring another 133
Mineralized feces chock-full of parasitic eggs indicate that it wasn’t the lower classes alone who suffered from certain infectious diseases
Grammy-winning artist Carlos Vives sings the title song, which honors the rich traditions underlying the film's music
Pair bonds between the fish aren't as strong as you think
Despite fierce obstacles in her path, the Black female aviator became a hero that would pave the way for generations to come
Scientists are working to understand the matriarchs, who can survive decades while investing huge amounts of energy into reproduction
Unable to bear the shame of being captured as a prisoner of war, Shoichi Yokoi hid in the jungles of Guam until January 1972
Very high resolution satellites give scientists a new way to find out when and where a large-bodied whale, such as a humpback or a sperm, is stranded
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