The canine wouldn't have been a good hunter, hinting early humans may have loved their pets for more than athleticism
A team of librarians at the White House Historical Association are digitizing 25,000 behind-the-scenes photographs from 1962 to 1987
Keeping an equal distance between cars ahead and behind may eliminate "phantom" traffic jams
Funded by Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, the $42 million mechanical timekeeper will be located inside a mountain in west Texas
Photographer George Krieger captured the unusual scene in vivid detail
The bird's distinctive coloration may be caused by a genetic mutation or a health issue
The multidisciplinary artist and activist reshaped what art could be
Physics and statistics can describe how building patterns relate to cities' tendency to hold heat
No one claimed the suitcase containing "Les Choristes" stolen from a Marseille Museum in 2009
One archaeologist believes the relic may have belonged to the biblical figure, but there are major problems with her interpretation
A British publisher is releasing 1,000 facsimiles of the two notebooks in which Shelly scrawled her iconic novel
In a new paper, researchers hypothesize that the location of cave art and sounds early humans heard might be linked
Physics and culture shape music, but as a recent video essay breaks it down, the results are more varied that most people think
Satellites and artificial intelligence fill in gaps in global fisheries knowledge
The sanitation workers have already amassed a collection of more than 6,000 books
Their diet may seem unusual, but a unique genome and gut bacteria help the critters get the nutrients they need
It will join the rest of Albert Frey's work
Scientists say the chances were less than one in a million
DNA analysis has shown that Atlantic-dwelling sixgill sharks are distinct from their relatives in the Indian and Pacific oceans
Researchers create Caribbean's first complete ancient human genome, find Taíno genes in living people
Page 475 of 988