The public voted to call the bird Branwen in honor of a Celtic goddess
As sea level rise poisons woodlands with saltwater, more work is needed to understand these ecosystems' contributions to climate change
Hurricane season runs from June 1 to November 30 and NOAA predicts it will see between 13 and 20 named storms
Tardigrades thrive in a variety of extreme conditions, so researchers wanted to know if they could withstand simulated space landing impacts
The duke of Brittany had his second spouse's likeness painted over an image of his late first wife
Researchers found the strange material inside a piece of red trinitite, a glass-like amalgam formed by the blast's intense heat and pressure
Between 2022 and 2025, the U.S. Mint is set to highlight up to 20 trailblazing American women
The rare artifact depicts war god Mars and Victoria, the mythological personification of victory
The top of the Darwin’s Arch, a natural stone archway, fell as a result of natural erosion
Between the 1970s and 2012, looters stole elegant artworks from two villas neighboring the famed ancient settlement
This 'zombie' fungus isn't going after the bugs' brains—it’s after their genitals
A PBS documentary investigates the cause of the infamous 1937 explosion that tanked the airship industry
New research suggests a circle of Tudor women saved the "Book of Hours" for the queen's daughter, Elizabeth I
Much of the western U.S. will see an extra-large, eerily red full moon on May 26
The technique may provide doctors with a new way of providing supplemental oxygen for patients with failing lungs
Hunting decimated the big cat’s population in the United States by the mid-20th century
A century after the massacre of a prosperous Black community, Smithsonian volunteers transcribed nearly 500 pages of vital records in less than 24 hours
The new commitment adds 20 million Moderna, Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson doses to the previously promised 60 million AstraZeneca doses
The Antarctic adventurer was initially diagnosed with scurvy, but new research suggests he actually suffered from beriberi
The Germanic writing suggests Slavs used an alphabet more than 200 years earlier than previously believed
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