The patient was treated during the earlier stages of disease, so the community faces little risk, according to health officials
The gold accessory is one of only seven artifacts of this kind discovered in England and Wales
Made up of some 1,600 stones, the submerged “Blinkerwall” might be Europe's oldest known megastructure
Ancient scholars wrote about the medicinal, poisonous and psychoactive properties of black henbane seeds
With only limited training, the model could correctly identify certain objects, suggesting some elements of learning language are not innate to humans
The University of Melbourne welcomed academics from all over the world for its Taylor Swift conference
This summer's Paris Olympic and Paralympic medals will be decorated with pieces of iron from the landmark
Analyses revealed the asteroid was an “aubrite,” a classification that applies to only 80 of 70,000 previously found meteorite fragments
The 100-foot-long wreck, which likely dates to the 19th century, washed up off the coast of Cape Ray in January
On the English naturalist's 215th birthday, more than 9,000 titles from his expansive collection are now accessible online
When it debuts in 2026, the casting award will be the Academy's first new category since 2001
Nocturnal hawk moths are less likely to visit primroses in air polluted by nitrate radicals, which break down important wild fragrances, researchers find
A resident of Bellevue, Washington, attempted to donate the historic artifact to a museum, which alerted authorities
The instrument has been playing composer John Cage's "ASLSP" since 2001—and it's scheduled to conclude in 2640
This marks the third eruption since December in a region that, prior to 2021, hadn't seen volcanic activity for centuries
Detectives have arrested two suspects involved in the dramatic heist at a New York City gallery
The "active predators" prowled the oceans more than 325 million years ago, before the time of Pangea
Researchers suggest a global ocean lies 15 miles beneath the surface of Saturn's "Death Star" moon, Mimas—a shocking discovery that could redefine what a habitable world looks like
Some areas received as much as 13 to 15 inches of rain over a five-day period as storms felled trees, destroyed homes and killed nine people
Tavares Strachan's "The First Supper" took four years to sculpt and is now on display at an exhibition in London
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