Researchers say burying wood could be a viable method to prevent carbon from reaching the atmosphere
Sea robins have "the body of a fish, the wings of a bird and multiple legs like a crab"
A new exhibition in New York City uses more than 200 texts and artifacts to contemplate Lincoln's rise to the nation's highest office
The Dutch seized the majority of the items in the aftermath of a brutal 1906 conflict that killed an estimated 1,000 Balinese
Unexplored iron-rich magma could help power current and future technologies
New research has revealed that the mysterious white substance found alongside three ancient mummies was once a soft cheese called kefir
The discovery has implications for human health, since the microbes included some that were still viable, some that could be infectious to humans and others that carried drug-resistant genes
As hundreds of motorists take to the desert, their tracks damage the massive geoglyphs made by Indigenous groups in northern Chile
Scientists sent bioengineered heart tissue samples to the ISS to study how to keep astronauts safe during future long-term space travel
Researchers recently identified James Fitzjames, a captain on the ill-fated HMS Erebus that went looking for the Northwest Passage in 1845
Most adult king penguins weigh between 31 and 37 pounds. At nine months old, a 51.8-pound Pesto is already looming over his parents
A new “health check” for our planet sounds an alarm bell on rising ocean acidification, which is driven by carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere
While no written records exist, new research has illuminated key details of the battle fought in northern Germany during the 13th century B.C.E.
Using sound recordings, the team identified the largest known population of the night parrot, a secretive species known as the "Holy Grail of birdwatching"
The mysterious missive was written by P.J. Féret, who conducted an archaeological dig at the same site in northern France in 1825
Called the Australasian narrow-nosed spookfish, the cryptic species lives deep in the ocean off the coasts of New Zealand and Australia
In 1858, the mountain was named for a Confederate general. Now, it will once again be known as "Kuwohi"
An acoustic survey in 2018 and new analysis with A.I. suggest the sounds are vocalizations from the elusive Bryde’s whale
Researchers analyzed tiny fossils embedded in the limestone to determine the age and origins of the grave maker, which marked the final resting place of a prominent Jamestown colonist
The collaboration across species reveals a surprising social behavior of octopuses, researchers say
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