Most recently, the volcano had a series of small eruptions that began in December 2020 and lasted five months straight
The agency says the James Webb Space Telescope will retain its name regardless of concerns from astronomers, the public and NASA employees
Jens Haaning says he has no plans to repay the Kunsten Museum of Modern Art, which expected him to incorporate the cash into a new artwork
A major audit of nearly 50,000 monuments reveals the historical figures, themes and myths that dominate the nation's commemorative landscape
Researchers used a combination of DNA and physical analysis to approximate the trio's visages
Created by artist Suzanne Brennan Firstenberg, the installation covers the National Mall in white pennants featuring handwritten dedications to the dead
Fossilized eggs found in rock shelters suggest cassowaries were cohabitating with our ancestors
Many organisms included in the latest declaration were feared to be lost long before the Endangered Species Act of 1973 was first passed
Schoolteachers Mercie Lacks and Barbara Wagstaff captured the snapshots in August 1939
Inspired by helicopter seeds, the device could soon be used to monitor the environment
An exhibition at the Rijksmuseum unites two early likenesses of African men in Europe, among other 15th- and 16th-century masterpieces
A new DNA analysis suggests the enigmatic civilization was native to the Italian Peninsula
Archaeologists excavating the ancient city of Magnesia hope to fully restore the 2,300-year-old sacred structure
Authorities are investigating the blaze, which left the New York landmark's historic interior and contents largely unscathed
The study authors say the pandemic may have an even greater impact on life spans in less developed countries that were not included in the research
As it passes 1,000 days on the surface of the Red Planet, the InSight lander recorded three large bouts of tectonic activity in the past month
A.I. analysis renews doubts over the authenticity of a star painting in the London National Gallery's collection
The small pilot study included fecal samples from ten adults and six infants in New York state
A wealthy landowner probably hid the hoard to protect it from "barbarian" invaders
The documents, many of which are directly linked to conquistador Hernán Cortés, were smuggled out of the country and auctioned in the U.S.
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