The painting of Bélizaire, 15, shown behind the children of his enslavers, has been acquired by the Met
The insect, detected in Georgia, can snatch bees from the air while hunting, posing a threat to native pollinators and agriculture
Nat Read finally completed his 21,000-mile journey last month in Brunswick, Maine
At a Belgian university, Taylor Swift fans can expect intertextual analysis beyond their wildest dreams
The pack, which consists of a mother and her four offspring, is now the state’s southernmost wolf group
A pair of great white sharks named Simon and Jekyll have been swimming together for more than 4,000 miles in recent months
Cooper Hewitt recognizes talented trailblazers who are at the forefront of their fields
Electrodes collected brain signals while people listened to "Another Brick in the Wall, Part 1," then computers produced a garbled but recognizable track
The crisscrossing bars were likely part of the bath's changing room, called the apodyterium
New research suggests the continent was devoid of hominins for about 200,000 years after a previously unknown cold snap
Archaeology students have been working at the site since workers happened upon it in May
Among nine sources of particle pollution, fires and agriculture had the strongest link to dementia, according to a new analysis of a national survey
Archaeologists previously found a panda skull in a nearby Han burial, but its torso was missing
After surgically attaching pairs of mice, scientists suggest the procedure could rejuvenate the older individuals, slowing their aging
The 15 artifacts are the first Iron Age gold coins ever found in the country
The Rolling Stones bandmates both grew up in Dartford, Kent, where they met as teenagers
The National Park Service plans to lease out some of the structures, which have long been used by artists and writers
The ruling could set a groundbreaking precedent in answering the question: Does the government need to protect its citizens from climate change?
The piece was rediscovered in 1999 at a Virginia museum, which has finally agreed to hand it over
Scientists have long warned that Hawaii's cover of nonnative shrubs is kindling waiting to burn
Page 95 of 993