You already have welcomed your robot overlords, and they're building our financial system
A recent survey reveals that many service workers don't find American that bad at all
"Slacktivism" - easy online activism - could actually decrease how much people donate to their pet causes
Sip one of Henry Clay's very own mint juleps or spoon down a bowl of burgoo, aka roadkill soup
In Holland, some doctors and parents say the answer is yes
The petitions lend insight into the lives of African Americans during this tumultuous period in U.S. history, and now they're being digitized
The cicadas have been waiting for 17 years. This deadly fungus has been waiting for them
Can you "see" a ghost without seeing?
Should we add eating standing up to the list of food no-no's? It's unclear, science says
Mozambique's rhinos have been living on the edge of extinction for more than a century, but now they're finally gone for good
By delivering antibiotics alongside a protein found in breast milk, researchers could fight MRSA in mice
On top of dealing with the physical challenges, climbers have to be loaded.
With 180 individual lenses, this new camera mimics an insect's compound eye
On the battlefield, having internet to communicate with one another, control objects and weapons, and calculate positions can be extremely important
While energy efficiency and green labeling is a popular marketing strategy today, this strategy can polarize some conservative customers
Enough sewage to fill a 41 food deep pool the size of Central Park spilled out during Hurricane Sandy
Zoologists call the results of a 13-year-long hunt to find any remaining clouded leopards "disappointing"
Ramón y Cajal may have changed neuroscience forever, but he always maintained his original childhood passion for art
Thomas Parnell, the school's first physics professor, set up an experiment. It's still going
High fructose corn syrup, the sugary compound in soda, is also fed to bees
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