Michel Talagrand took home the 2024 Abel Prize for his work on stochastic systems, randomness and a proof of a physics reaction that many experts thought was unsolvable
The Perth Museum in Scotland is unveiling digital reconstructions of men and women who lived in the region from the Bronze Age through the 16th century
A new modeling study suggests the dark dunes on Saturn's largest moon are made of tiny particles created by crashing comets and moonlets billions of years ago
The experimental procedure was done on a man experiencing end-stage kidney failure last week who had been on the transplant waiting list for two years
The artifact, which features the words "like enduringly, love forever," had been declared a treasure by officials in Wales
Five California sites made the top ten list for unhealthiest air, according to a new report
Federal investigators have handed over the shoes to their rightful owner, who plans to sell them at auction later this year
For the first time, scientists have recreated what one patient suffering from prosopometamorphopsia, or PMO, sees when he looks at faces
The 7,000-year-old vessels offer evidence of advanced seafaring technology and an extensive regional trade network, a new study suggests
The National Park Service's restoration project will reconstruct a protective seawall and plant 274 new cherry blossoms when work is complete
Found in Poland, the "pilgrim's badge" was likely worn by a Christian traveler hundreds of years ago
The now-famous “virgin” stingray Charlotte is not having hybrid babies, scientists say. But in nature, distinct species sometimes interbreed to produce surprising offspring
Residents fled when flames burned through the Must Farm settlement, and now, archaeologists have unearthed its buildings and objects that were preserved in a riverbed
The Oregon Outback International Dark Sky Sanctuary covers 2.5 million acres in the southeastern part of the state
Pebanista yacuruna is the largest freshwater dolphin ever found, but it is more closely related to today's river dolphins of South Asia than those in the Amazon
The FBI has returned the rare objects to Okinawa, where they were looted during World War II
Conditions north of the Arctic Circle, where dinosaurs roamed in abundance during the mid-Cretaceous, were warmer than today, with rainfall comparable to “modern-day Miami”
The document was "likely the very first publicly available report on the creation of the bomb," according to RR Auction
Scientists have unearthed more than 4,400 human brains—some more than 12,000 years old—making them less rare than thought, a new study finds
Recurring symbols across 16 sites suggest that many of the artworks were created by the same cultural group
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