Some, but not all, of the hesitance to embrace vaccines can be traced back to this event more than 40 years ago
People have been using science on the Great Bambino since the 1920s
Leakey and her husband, Louis Leakey, were a paleoanthropology power couple
The “Henonville Songs” are being heard for the first time in 70 years
Over 10 million new chemicals are synthesized each year, but with little funding science can't keep up
Detailed aerial images reveal a remarkably ambitious transportation network consisting of 17 roads
Scientists have long thought soft tissues couldn't survive over millennia—but new research suggests that isn't the case
The walnut-sized stones were found inside a skeleton buried in modern-day Sudan
It preens, fishes and impresses
People in Iceland with genes associated with educational attainment are having fewer children, which may be affecting the population's smarts
The book was a turning point for the environmental movement
A new study may explain why the rodents are declining in western Europe
Dame Vera Lynn "the Forces' Sweetheart" will make the history books with the release
Kilauea is putting on a spectacularly scorching show
Nicolas Appert was trying to win a hefty prize offered by the French army
The island of Mauritius sits on a sunken piece of earth's crust torn apart by plate tectonics
Abigail Scott Duniway staged a lifelong fight for women's rights
Barred from use in U.S. court, lie detectors are still used today in other parts of the legal system
They've been holding the ceremony in Gobbler’s Knob every year since 1887
Celebrate the first day of Black History Month by getting to know the 19th-century sculptor
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