The monument to the nine black parishioners slain in Charleston in 2015 will include two wing-like benches that arc around a marble fountain
New research from UVA suggests the first vertebrates to colonize dry land carried scaly souvenirs with them
The new satellites are mostly tiny and include one oddball that is on a collision course with some of the 78 other moons orbiting the planet
Vessels cloaked in clashing colors, patterns attempted to confuse U-boat commanders by distorting their perception of a ship’s speed, size and location
After the government failed to file plans for restoring the monument, which is discolored by bug poo and pollution, the court has demanded action
Will Russia's fallen royal family finally receive a full burial from the Orthodox Church?
A new study has found that vocal pitch arises very early in life
The bread, which was found in northeast Jordan, dates back about 14,400 years and likely resembled modern-day wraps
Kubrick wrote the script for <i>Burning Love</i> in 1956, but the film never made it to the big screen
The 2018 RobotArt competition fielded more than 100 submissions entered by 19 teams from all over the world
The sacred items were once widely collected by Europeans. In recent years, New Zealand has worked to secure the repatriation of these ancestral remains
The circular structure in the Boyne Valley was discovered by drone photographers searching for signs of hidden Neolithic sites
‘We are standing before a goldmine of information,’ one expert said
Preliminary investigation suggests the rhinos died as a result of salt poisoning
The founder of psychoanalysis handed out the rings to students, colleagues and friends who supported and spread his theories
Of nearly 40 things Pleistocene people might have done with their hands, getting to yummy marrow requires the most force and dexterity
After growing out the nails on his left hand for 66 years, Shridhar Chillal has sold the 31 feet of keratin to Ripley's Believe It Or Not
A detailed analysis of the mummy’s stomach contents suggests he knew precisely what to eat to survive in harsh Alpine conditions
The scanner uses technology developed for the Large Hadron Collider
Now identified as a late antiquity medical document, the 2,000-year-old papyrus describes the phenomenon of female "hysterical apnea"
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