For two months, the group of 12 men must eat, sleep, exercise, bathe and use the toilet while at least one shoulder is touching the bed
Experts are debating what the case will mean for the future of fair-use law
This ancestor of mammals briefly thrived amid a massive extinction event, hinting at how carnivores may respond to climate change today
The water cuts suggested by California, Arizona and Nevada are not as ambitious as those proposed by the federal government, but they will buy time
Citing modesty concerns, an ad firm rejected a poster depicting the Renaissance sculpture
As the city, and others like it, slowly subsides, it becomes more vulnerable to flooding driven by climate change
The new policies won't apply at certain high-traffic destinations like the Acropolis
One researcher says this may be a response to a "critical moment of agony" a female orca experienced with a boat
One journalist's archival discovery is changing historians' understanding of the two civil rights leaders
Service members stationed at Camp Lejeune, where water was contaminated, had a 70 percent greater risk of developing the movement disorder, new study finds
The Blanton Museum in Austin asked bakers to create edible versions of pieces in its collection
The action was a protest against public subsidies for fossil fuels and called attention to the deadly floods occurring in northern Italy
The artifacts help settle an unanswered question about ancient architectural materials
Using concrete and mortar made with shredded diapers could address issues like plastic waste and sand shortages, per a new study
Fans of the hit sitcom "Cheers" now have a chance to purchase the beloved set piece
The finding could mean that past predictions of sea-level rise from glaciers should double
Researchers collected 16 terabytes of data to create the very first full-sized 3D scan of the wreckage
The Stone Age engravings are to-scale depictions of desert kites, massive stone structures used by hunters to capture animals
The "Poor Man's Rembrandt Project" will allow visitors to forge a permanent connection with the 17th-century artist
It's only the fourth record of the species in the U.K., and experts say it's a sign of warming waters due to climate change
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