Cast your vote for your favorite of the photographs, which are all contenders for the People’s Choice award, through January 29
The Englishman’s pamphlet helped spur the 13 colonies to declare independence from Britain
Axial Seamount doesn’t pose a threat to humans, but observing what happens before and after its potential eruption could help scientists learn about submerged volcanoes and strengthen predictions
In the past, the names could only be viewed in person. But due to expiring access restrictions, they're now available to anyone with an internet connection
Researchers accounted for the previously overlooked structures of the dwarf planet and moon in computer simulations of a celestial collision
The fish weighed 608 pounds, which is also about the same size as an adult male grizzly bear. It garnered the second highest bid at the Toyosu Market since records began in 1999
The intricately crafted coffin dates back more than 1,500 years. Researchers say it weighs around 1,650 pounds, "comparable to an adult male polar bear"
Among the destroyed structures are the ranch established by comedian Will Rogers and a motel owned by notorious publisher William Randolph Hearst
The 39th U.S. president aimed to quash the debilitating water-based infection before he died. Through the Carter Center's work, he came tantalizingly close, lowering the number of yearly cases from 3.5 million to just 14
These small but mighty pups have roots on family farms in Denmark and Sweden, where they helped catch rodents, herd livestock, hunt and watch over the property
The digital jukebox enjoyed a two-decade reign as the dominant program for storing audio files
The death of a Louisiana resident who was over the age of 65 signals that future H5N1 infections are not guaranteed to be mild, health experts say
Experts on the hunt for the queen's tomb believe that they’ve found a small bust of her—but not everyone agrees
A new exhibition at the Louvre takes visitors on a visual journey, exploring how the figure of the fool evolved between the Middle Ages and the 19th century
A lawsuit to protect the snail darter from the Tellico Dam in Tennessee offered the first real test of the 1973 Endangered Species Act. But a new study disputes the fish's status as a distinct species
Piece by piece, experts carefully transported the Phoenician vessel to dry land, where it will be studied and preserved
The climate-altering eruption came from the Zavaritskii volcano on an uninhabited island in the Pacific that once hosted a Soviet submarine base, according to a new study
Forces commanded by Andrew Jackson fought the British in the Louisiana port city in the last standoff of the War of 1812
The Chuckwalla National Monument and the Sáttítla Highlands National Monument will protect more than 848,000 acres of public lands
Using Arctic ice core samples, researchers estimate silver mining and smelting released enough lead during the Pax Romana to cause a 2.5- to 3-point drop in IQ
Page 1 of 1006