None of the eggs were fertile, but conservation officials have hatched a plan to encourage the flamingos to breed again
When the American Civil War crippled England’s cotton industry, impoverished workers turned to poetry to convey their plight
Researchers suggest early humans pursued “least-effort strategies” when crafting tools, collecting resources
A new study shows that the relationship between coral polyps and zooxanthellae that produces colorful coral reefs began 160 million years ago
<i>Maud</i>, which sunk in Arctic Canada in 1930, was floated across the Atlantic to its new home in a museum in Vollen
The online graduate program is a collaboration between Arizona State University and the National World War II Museum in New Orleans
New research suggests that soft-bodied organisms called Ediacarans may have been related to an animal of the Cambrian era
Study shows online observations can help researchers refine the range maps of many species overlooked by field biologists
It has long been believed that the famed poet was born in 1902, but his name appears in newspaper articles from 1901
The Thanksgiving snapshot places Jerry and Rita Alter in Tucson, Arizona, just a day before the 1985 heist
New DNA study reveals how the Norse Greenlanders cornered the market on ivory in Europe
New study suggests ape vocalizations vary according to neural abilities, not vocal anatomy
A new study reconfirms that the Pink and White Terraces were destroyed by a volcano in 1886 and can't be dug up
A new study reveals the secret to the invertebrates’ dazzling mating ritual
The Oxford research fellow names Bernardino Luini as main artist, believes da Vinci only painted between five to 20 percent of the painting
While the proposed branch of the armed forces may be controversial, the history of the so-called "Space Force" is longstanding
Smoke and flames from the Ferguson Fire have closed the roads to the National Park's most popular attraction at the height of tourist season
Low rainfall leads to poor harvests, starving troops, more mutinies and higher risk of regicide
But experts caution that violent activity could start again at any moment
By the end of the century, the ocean is predicted to become two-and-a-half times more acidic, which is bad news for sea life.
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