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Changes in plankton populations over the past centuries correlate with rising sea temperatures
Apollo at 50: We Choose to Go to the Moon
A collection of stories to celebrate the semicentennial of the Apollo 11 mission
Apollo at 50: We Choose to Go to the Moon
From JFK's real motives to the Soviets' secret plot to land on the Moon at the same time, a new behind-the-scenes view of an unlikely triumph 50 years ago
Old fossils and new technology are coloring in life’s prehistoric palette
A new book explores how racist biases continue to maintain a foothold in research today
Apollo at 50: We Choose to Go to the Moon
Duplicates of the 3D scanned historic Apollo artifact will also tour Major League ballparks this summer
Fifty years ago, the astronauts who crewed the “dress rehearsal” for Apollo 11 paved the way for history to be made just a couple months later
Meet Dunkleosteus, perhaps the fiercest fish that ever existed
Researchers calculate that the pests evolved long before bats, which were thought to be their first hosts
Apollo at 50: We Choose to Go to the Moon
Moon-landing deniers, says space scholar and former NASA chief historian Roger Launius, are full of stuff and nonsense
Some of the oldest known Neanderthal remains include teeth that could push back the split with modern human lineages, but not all scientists are convinced
In both humans and social insects, the capacity to engage in total war seems to hinge on population numbers
Cat-loving paleontologist answers your questions in the National Museum of Natural History's YouTube series, "The Doctor Is In."
The ebb and flow of rainy seasons corresponds with the hatching of millions of mosquitoes—and the spread of diseases they carry
Some of the trees along the Black River provide a window into climates dating back thousands of years
Though <i>Ambopteryx longibrachium</i> was likely a glider, the fossil is helping scientists discover how dinosaurs first took to the skies
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