Specimens once thought to be the remains of children or animals are likely a product of the 1800’s “mummy mania”
The film, produced in around 1945, offers a thorough, fact-filled tour of the city
The developer called a halt after fewer than 10 people had been treated in the trial’s first month
The first printing of Shakespeare's 154 sonnets was dedicated to a “Mr. WH”—has a scholar finally identified him?
Africa’s most elusive wild cat makes a rare daytime appearance
Scientists have proven through genetics that bats were the first hosts to the pesky parasite before passing them on to ancient humans
Women are more easily identified from their shopping patterns than men
Many people carry it, but it doesn’t make you sick and could actually fight against viruses like HIV and Ebola
They might be fun to look at, but they're not necessarily good news
Diving supported life on the wind-scoured, rocky island of Jeju
A beached whale, a supercomputer, a scientific mystery solved
Experiments conducted by a Siberian research team shed light on the neurosurgical methods evident in three Iron Age skulls
New study shows that citizens and scientists only agree some of the time
Closer to their stars than Mercury is to the Sun, these hot worlds deserve an explanation
The men who participated in a South Carolina sit-in were sentenced to 30 days hard labor in 1961
Blaming the anti-vaccination movement for an uptick in measles is oversimplification
Ancient oak trees found on the bottom of the North Sea represent a prehistoric woodland that likely spanned thousands of acres
Perceived cost might influence drugs’ benefits
Cameras and “hair snares” could preserve a threatened Sierra species
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