The study finds that fin whale songs are powerful enough to reverberate through the Earth’s crust, allowing scientists to study its thickness and structure
Located in an ancient necropolis, the 5,000-year-old facility was capable of producing up to 5,900 gallons of beer at a time
Viewers can peruse a high-resolution image of the 224-foot medieval masterpiece, which chronicles the 1066 conquest of England
The "Whydah" sank off the coast of Massachusetts in 1717, killing all but two people on board
New research suggests early Britons used megaliths from a dismantled Welsh monument to construct the iconic ring of standing stones
The condition may present both physical and social risk factors that make transmission more likely
In the second century A.D., the Roman ruler entertained his guests on a raised marble platform surrounded by elaborate fountains
New research finds climate change is making allergy season arrive earlier and bring higher pollen loads in North America
Along the East Coast and Gulf of Mexico, beachgoers mistake sea whip coral for discarded junk
The newly announced funding will help universities make decades-old interviews widely available
A critic of the controversial project points out that construction could lead to the loss of half a million artifacts
The 'swift-footed lizard' won 60 percent of 35,000 total online votes
Some of the petite sculptures still bear traces of the pigments used to decorate them
After a few months of observing Mars from orbit, the mission will attempt to land a rover on the planet's surface
Researchers found the ancient moisturizer in a nobleman's tomb
Chien-Shiung Wu’s experiment in 1956 helped her colleagues win the Nobel Prize while her role was only mentioned in the acceptance speech
A study in mice found that poison-spewing sperm make others swim in circles, but carry the antidote for themselves
Minted between 75 and 4 B.C., the silver currency was probably buried by a high-ranking Roman soldier during Augustus' reign
Traders likely transported the small spheres from Italy to northern Alaska in the mid-15th century
Researchers used sensitive instruments to measure weak magnetic fields when the flytrap's 'jaws' closed up
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