It is physically and scientifically possible for a body of water to part
For most people, wearing a white wedding dress wasn't really a thing until the 1950s
It doesn't matter how many pureed veggies you drink, they won't vaporize those mysterious "poisons" you've heard about
A cheap DSLR and some light computer processing can unveil far off exoplanets
Electric eels can shock prey into both revealing their positions and freezing in place
The Digital Einstein archive offers a look into the great physicist's writings
American spaceflight enters a new era
Healthy coral reefs produce a medley of sounds that ocean creatures use as homing beacons
A professor at the University of Nebraska stumbled upon an ode to Whitman’s contemporary William Cullen Bryant
Conservationists want this particular population of humpbacks to be classified as critically endangered
Humans likely carry the same kind of cells in our own brains
Hear African wildlife from the 1930s with the British Library's nature sound archives
Google is getting rid of spam bots and annoying squiggly text at the same time
Orion's quest for space will have to wait until tomorrow
Microbes found in the guts of waxworms like to feast on polyethylene
Nuclear testing yielded far more, and more diverse, images of mushroom clouds than those that are commonly shown
Overenthusiastic shale gas estimates may be setting the world up for a fracking crash
Researchers implanted immature human brain cells in mouse pups, which then grew and replaced nearly half the mice's own cells
The block was never used, likely because it was too big to transport
NASA's long-distance crew capsule, Orion, will get its first test flight tomorrow
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