The mint-condition copy could become one of the most expensive baseball cards ever sold at auction
Officials urge the public to squish the bugs, which are damaging crops and trees in the eastern U.S.
The artist will be the first Black woman to write music for the New York City Ballet
Fourteen patients who were blind could see again after the surgery, and three of them attained perfect vision
The elaborate scheme targeted her mother, the widow of a prominent art dealer, police say
The fate of the stones that were once a part of the U.S. Capitol has locals despondent
A new law directs museums to "prominently place a placard" acknowledging Nazi-looted art
New research suggests the buildup of a molecule in the brain might play a role
The massive animal was likely between 10 and 20 years old when it died roughly 12,000 years ago
“Vocal membranes” in primates make their speech grating and unpredictable, study suggests. Humans have no such thing
The collection includes "Nosepicker 1," which may be the artist's first self-portrait
Toxic gas, hypothermia and fragile terrain are among the site’s dangers
A new exhibition explores the writer's enduring interest in ghosts and other paranormal phenomena
Conservationists were thrilled that the Kemp’s Ridley had nested in a new location, increasing its long odds for survival
New research reveals the animals expel mucus as a form of self-cleaning and other creatures eat the stuff up
Park officials say that decades of prescribed burns helped keep the historic trees safe
Researchers have never observed gorillas making the unusual sound in the wild, suggesting that captive gorillas can learn to make new noises
Despite pushback, plans for a sculpture honoring the visionary mathematician have been approved
The giant crustacean was originally mistaken for a different species at an aquarium in Japan
The historical marker contained a number of falsehoods about the Mile High City's first race riot
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