During Australia’s devastating bushfires in 2019 and 2020, misinformation spread about wombats welcoming animals into their underground homes—but a new study finds a kernel of truth in the viral story
Dozens of items, including burnt bones and ceramics, provide new insights into ritual activity in the city of Ostia
Veteran storm chaser Val Castor spotted the behemoth ice chunk in a ditch near Vigo Park in the Texas panhandle
The genealogy company has digitized and published 38,000 newspaper articles from between 1788 and 1867—before Black Americans were counted as citizens in the U.S. census
The Apollo 8 lunar module pilot also served in the U.S. Air Force and worked extensively on nuclear energy projects
The "excellently preserved" chess knight, six-sided die and several other pieces are all about 1,000 years old
A stagnant high-pressure system over the region is trapping heat, exacerbating high temperatures and setting records
The 17th-century artworks were recovered from Germany and placed at the Paris museum in the 1950s
A new study suggests people in the Eurasian steppe bred horses around 2200 B.C.E., challenging earlier ideas about the beginnings of horse husbandry
A genetic analysis of opulent burial mounds in Germany sheds new light on how power passed through family lines
The strain is not the same one that has infected U.S. cows and three dairy farm workers, and officials say the risk to the general public remains low
The 86-square-foot space is adorned with artworks depicting female figures and agricultural imagery
Likely transported by Hurricane Idalia last August, more than 100 of the pink birds were counted in a February census in the Sunshine State, where they are considered a native species
A new exhibition begins long before the creation of the Negro Leagues and ends with the triumphs and challenges of today's players
New research offers evidence that humans did not inhabit the island of Timor until around 44,000 years ago, suggesting it was not part of the original migration route from Southeast Asia to Australia
Created in 1979, the rare missile-firing figurine has become a "mythic icon" among collectors
The celebration commemorates June 19, 1865, when a military decree informed the people of Texas that all enslaved people were free
Three previous uncrewed test flights ended with Starship being destroyed, but both the booster and the spacecraft splashed down on the fourth try
The well-preserved artifact may belong to a special class of high-quality, engraved weapons
Get outside, ditch the light pollution and marvel at the cosmos on these protected public lands
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