Davidson Galleries had been preparing to move to a new location, so some of its works were especially vulnerable to smoke damage
Astrobotic, the company in charge of the mission, says its Peregrine spacecraft will not reach the moon, and burning it will ensure the lander doesn't end up as space debris
Unseen for nearly 300 years, the art resurfaced during restorations at Christ's College
Dogs communicate through tail-wagging, and humans may have selected for the trait during domestication
A stream of particles flung from the planet's star is causing its atmosphere to boil away and lose 200,000 tons of mass per second
With his victory at last night's Emmy Awards, the celebrated musician is the 19th person in history to take home an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony
Fissures near Grindavík ejected lava for the second time in one month and engulfed three homes in the coastal fishing town
A forensic artist has reimagined what the man may have looked like 2,000 years ago
The city's 13th arrondissement honored the British musical legend on what would have been his 77th birthday
The endangered, squirrel-sized marsupials forage for termites during the day—but they can become too hot after just ten minutes in direct sunlight, according to new research
Sold in exchange for exit visas in 1939, the estimated $30 million masterpiece will stay at a Spanish museum
The distinguished blobfish has been judged unfairly
Global bans on finning have inadvertently opened up shark meat markets, prompting demand for threatened species, a new study reveals
Freedom of information requests have revealed more details about absent artifacts from the last 20 years
Some of the Northern Hemisphere's most populous areas are at risk of warming past a critical threshold, after which snowpack melts rapidly with even small rises in temperature, study finds
Laser imaging has revealed an extensive network of settlements and roads that challenge historical understandings of the area
The remains, dug up in the 1980s, might shed light on T. rex's mysterious origins, according to a new paper
Researchers who investigated the site estimate that it's about 700 years old
Genetic variants linked to the risk of MS were brought to Europe during a migration around 5,000 years ago, a new study finds—and they might have helped herders survive
The massive primates were unable to shift their diet to keep pace with a changing climate, according to a new study, forcing them to eat less nutritious bark and twigs
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