The whereabouts of the work—and the individuals who conducted the "brazen" heist—remain a mystery
Disparities from Covid-19 and opioid overdose deaths are major contributors to the widening gap, according to a new study
The French government gave the museum 30 months to raise the funds to purchase the Cimabue painting
In addition to warming temperatures, new research finds contaminants might contribute to the endangered reptiles' skewed sex ratios
Titled "Weird Medieval Guys," a new book examines illustrations of armless frogs, human-sized snails and more
The soldiers have been given honorable discharges, and their families may now be eligible for benefits
Scientists have discovered a pathway between the heart and brain in mice that appears to be involved during loss of consciousness
The four-night sailing is organized by Swifties, though the singer-songwriter herself won't be on board
In a lab on Earth, the machine created a catalyst from Martian materials that can extract oxygen from water, for astronauts to breathe or use as fuel
A new device translates museum-goers' brainwaves into a simplified real-time visualization
The comedian launched an “alarmingly aggressive” global effort on behalf of the pūteketeke to shore up its victory in the annual popularity competition
The celestial spectacle has been ongoing since the beginning of the month, but it will peak Friday night into early Saturday morning
A water-stained first-class dinner menu dated April 11, 1912 just sold for more than $100,000
The stunt was planned to commemorate the 400th anniversary of the Bard's First Folio
The country's Reykjanes Peninsula has been experiencing swarms of seismic activity for weeks, as magma accumulates beneath the surface
The bag slipped away while Jasmin Moghbeli and Loral O’Hara were performing routine maintenance on the International Space Station
The 1932 painting of the artist's mistress, Marie-Thérèse Walter, fetched $139 at auction
Slow-motion video revealed the birds take two different approaches: flying sideways or pinning their wings back and darting like a bullet
The new exhibition “On the Reverse” encourages visitors to think of paintings as three-dimensional objects by showing their back sides
Although serpents were a symbol of protection for the Egyptians, the discovery suggests some were wary of getting venomous bites after death
Page 74 of 990