Individuals carrying these ancient ancestors' DNA are more likely to have slightly elongated, rather than rounded, brains
The Parker Solar Probe survived its first swoop around our star and will get even closer on its next two dozen trips
Volume features 22 letters from author to his family, photographs of the razed city of Dresden, telegrams and news clippings
After six visits to the ship and sophisticated modeling, historians have concluded that a German mine sunk the cruiser off the coast of New York in 1918
A new genetic study traces the movement of one of the world's most vital crops from Mexico to South America
The plan will require $1.1 billion and involve a number of controversial measures
The Newseum, Vive collaboration catalogues the intrepid reporter’s record-breaking journey
The child star captivated audiences and artists alike, served as muse for Lewis Carroll, James McNeill Whistler
Satellite images of the Adelie penguin's pink guano shows how their colony size and diet have changed over the last 4 decades
Between the Viking Age and modern times, felines increased in size by 16 percent
The Committee to Protect Journalists documents the worrying trend it characterizes as the "new normal"
A new study argues that the sheer abundance of chicken consumption, coupled with the strange skeletons of modern chickens, will leave a unique fingerprint
Herds in Canada, the U.S. and Russia have dropped by over half in 20 years—and some may not recover
A new report reveals the pieces voluntarily recorded with the U.K.'s Portable Antiquities Scheme last year
Olafur Eliasson’s ‘Ice Watch’ aims to bring viewers into direct confrontation with the devastation wrought by global warming
New study suggests spikes in lightning activity mark key changes during early stages of eruptions
Fewer predators and heightened competition for mates allowed urban tungara frogs to add more notes and frills to their calls, with big results Read more: h
The research center says 20 percent of Americans rely on sites like Facebook, Twitter for news updates, while 16 percent cite print as main news source
Demonstrators sprayed the famed monument with graffiti and ransacked its small museum
Researchers say the prehistoric mass extinction event could mirror contemporary—and future—devastation sparked by global warming
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