Octopus tentacles still react up to an hour after being severed from their dead owner, and even try to pick up food and feed a phantom mouth
The internet of today touches the vast majority of the globe—and beyond—but not so long ago the net had a much more modest footprint
Scientists watched the magnetic field of a star 51 light years away flip back and forth
The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry will make the final call of whether or not the time has arrived to confirm ununpentium's existence
The ornate, well made carousels of the past are in danger - degrading, being sold piecemeal and sometimes even for parts
The researchers coined the term "dispositional attitudes" as a new means of assessing a person's baseline outlook on the world
How do you quantify the buzz around a movie? One group of researchers suggests looking at Wikipedia edits
The Bureau of Land Management funded the center through mandatory fees for housing developers, but money dried up after the housing bubble burst
For heart attack victims, life expectancy decreases by about 10 percent for every minute that ticks by after an emergency
By burning down trees, wildfires open the door for future flooding
The Moon was birthed from the Earth—a blob of molten rock sent spiraling off into space in the aftermath of a massive collision 4.5 billion years ago
In the 1880's the Children's Hospital in Boston didn't have electricity, so it couldn't use X-rays. But the nearby Opera House did
Construction equipment operators have to go through apprenticeships and training to learn to maneuver machines. But one company thinks that's all too hard
A recent CDC release says 300,000 Americans get Lyme disease each year
This was the song that those on Lifeboat 11 heard while the Titanic sunk
For doctors on the ground, the question is less who used chemical weapons, and more how they are going to treat the victims
Recently declassified documents detail the CIA's knowledge of Iraq's chemical weapon program in the 1980s
The greenhouse where rochaes were being raised was destroyed by an unknown vandal - perhaps a neighbor not pleased about millions of cockroaches next door
Were cavemen making them?
Sometimes it’s astonishing how good computer programmers are at making computers do a whole number of things you might never imagine a machine should do
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