A new study shows excess outdoor light is impacting how insects hunt, mate and make them more vulnerable to predators
CT scans identified two of five mummified big cats as young lions, but the remaining animals' identities remain unclear
The cycle of grazing and fertilizing prolongs spring-like vegetation in grasslands and makes green-up more intense in following years
The organized crime group had connections across Italy, Britain, Germany, France and Serbia
From tiny insects to large marine mammals, animals are affected by noise in ways that might threaten their survival
Archaeologists don't know why the two vessels were buried on top of one another, but the practice may be linked with property rights
The process requires stopping a trauma patient's heart and cooling their body with ice-cold saline
The groundbreaking community arts project has long been under the stewardship of the Atlanta-based NAMES Project Foundation
A German museum released the digital data to artist Cosmo Wenman after a hoax heist and lengthy legal battle
Over 100 recently-hatched gharials were found deep in Nepal's Bardia National Park
Scientists have known about the ancient snake group Najash for years, but were not able to gain a thorough understanding of its skull until now
The trove of newly documented geoglyphs includes a humanoid figure identified by artificial intelligence
Each cellar has unique flora that gives its wheels of Saint-Nectaire a different flavor
The ten feathers are the first signs that fluffy dinosaurs lived near the South Pole more than 100 million years ago
Officials hope the building's new function will deter Nazi sympathizers from making pilgrimages to the site
The tiny volume, one of six created for a series, will now join four surviving counterparts on view at the Brontë Parsonage Museum
The map showcases the planet's flat plains, sand dunes, hilly terrain and lakes full of liquid methane
A new exhibit marking the 100th anniversary of the passage of the 19th Amendment features innovative illustrations from the suffragist movement to today
Members of Ecuador's Guangala culture may have outfitted the infants in skulls as a protective measure
A new study estimates that the group’s population has grown from 440 individuals in 1958 to nearly 25,000 today
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