The Chesapeake 1000 was used to construct a ship for a top-secret CIA mission in the 1970s
The circular wisps are mostly condensed water vapor
The handwritten manuscript he produced is going to auction, where it could become the most expensive item associated with the mystery writer ever sold
Titles with LGBTQ themes dominated the American Library Association's newly released list
From Texas to Maine, millions of Americans looked up and were spellbound by the spectacular phenomenon
A recent study analyzes Scandinavian examples of filed teeth and elongated skulls dating to the Viking Age
Two specific broods will appear together for the first time since 1803
The two babies are part of an endangered species whose unbearable cuteness has made them a target for wildlife traffickers
Three companies are competing to design NASA's lunar terrain vehicle (LTV) for the agency’s Artemis campaign
An estimated 600 of the hoofed intruders are wreaking havoc on the two-square-mile island of Alicudi
The largest 3D map of the universe ever made hints that dark energy might not be a constant, though the findings must be backed up with more data
The acclaimed biopic of the Manhattan Project's leader has been met with mixed reviews by Japanese audiences
After just two nights of short sleep, a person’s “subjective age,” or how old they feel, can spike by more than four years
While they urge caution, researchers think an artist may have traced a stingray in the sand some 130,000 years ago
The spring Chinook salmon smolts should still be able to find their way to the Pacific Ocean and help boost the threatened population of the fish, officials say, though another 25,000 salmon died in the accident
Divers clearing the Patapsco River are grappling with poor visibility and dangerous conditions, so they rely heavily on real-time sonar observations
Not in the path of totality? See the moon blot out the sun, revealing its magnificent corona, from your computer or phone
A new exhibition at the Met is the first to examine the tradition of covered 15th- and 16th-century portraits, which were designed to be interactive and often portable
The state's prison agency settled a lawsuit with the incarcerated men, allowing them to watch the eclipse on religious grounds. But for now, the rest of New York's correctional facilities will remain locked down on April 8
Eastern garter snakes might recognize their own scents, suggesting the reptiles are more cognitively complex than thought, according to a new study
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