The trend of pointing floodlights at churches in Sweden has driven some long-eared bat colonies out of their historic roosts
The Carlisle Indian Industrial School was founded by a military officer who wanted to “kill the Indian … [and] save the man in him”
The latest edition of the Duden dictionary includes <i>tindern,</i> or online dating, and <i>postfaktisch</i>, meaning post-truth
The findings revealed that the bias was strongest in more religious countries including the United States, United Arab Emirates and India
'The Compleat Angler' is much more than an instruction manual on fishing. It's a Walden-like meditation on nature and friendship
To mark its 40th anniversary, NASA is asking for your help crafting a message
The ape was raised by an anthropologist who taught him to clean his room, use the toilet and bargain for cheeseburgers
In 1937, the Nazis confiscated modernist art from museums and put it up for ridicule in an exhibit that still reverberates today
A new project maps almost 200 recordings taken in 27 different countries over the past 26 years
Turns out that cats really don't take direction well
Astronomers aren't sure if the 5,600-mile-wide storm will peter out or if a deep vortex will keep it churning
The ancient Greeks, and people for almost 2,000 years after them, argued over whether one was a number
It’s an epic battle for dumpling domination
70,000 images are available for download via the National Palace Museum's website
Video testimony and research findings supplement selections from the museum’s holdings
After a two-year restoration, the 109-year-old Sabino is ready to sail for many years to come
<i>Loving Vincent</i> will include more than 56,000 paintings
Maples worked on a number of high-profile cases that helped to bring the field of forensic anthropology to prominence
The bank began as a tongue-in-cheek protest, but residents are taking it seriously
Dogs have been assisting blind humans for a very long time, but the arrangement only became formal recently
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