The demo failed to impress recording executives in the early 1960s
New simulations show Andromeda absorbed the large galaxy M32p about 2 billion years ago
Cerro Gordo was once a lively mining town. Now its new owners have plans to refurbish it in hopes of attracting visitors to the relic of the Wild West
The terracotta feline was believed to have gone missing after the death of Claude Monet's son Michel
As temperatures rise, the spider dines differently, resulting in a cascade of effects in the Arctic
Archaeologists have unearthed 2,000-year-old barracks, a military commander’s home and thousands of artifacts
Including phases where the moon is partially masked, the event will last nearly four hours total
Ruya Maps will stage exhibitions, talks and commissions for artists working in countries often overlooked by the Western market
Paintings and sculptures rendered in Klein’s signature blue stand alongside Old Masters, 18th-century baroque stylings
The man appears healthy, but like other indigenous people of Brazil, his way of life is in danger
Despite making up 5 percent of the world's population, indigenous peoples maintain large swathes of land, two-thirds of which are still in a natural state
An emergency keel-block release suggests the crew did not panic, meaning they may have been incapacitated when the sub went down
Although cabernet bottled after the 2011 disaster contains double the amount of pre-Fukushima radiation, researchers say levels pose no health risk
Hand-axe wear suggests our hominid cousins used flint and pyrite to unleash Prometheus' gift
It is far from certain that the <i>Dmitrii Donskoi</i> would have—or could have— carried such a huge hoard of gold
Artifacts in the sprawling collection include a Chilean potato plant collected by Charles Darwin and 18th-century lavender
Museum of the City of New York's latest exhibition puts the spotlight on these 19th-century women who defied Victorian ideals
A study shows that methane emissions are responsible for the increase of noctilucent clouds, which glow eerily at night
In 1541, roughly 35,000 Quijos lived in the valley. By the 1580s, they had vanished, leaving little evidence of their existence behind
The Iron Age artifacts were sealed in a subterranean chamber of the Cairns Broch, a tower-like stone structure
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