Pianist and educator Ellis Marsalis Jr., trumpeter Wallace Roney, and guitarist Bucky Pizzarelli succumbed to complications caused by the novel coronavirus
Due to COVID-19, Art + Action's "Come to Your Census" project has pivoted from posters and events to social media and online outreach
New research suggests the civilization used huge enclosures to trap and stockpile live fish to support its complex society
Traces of lead pollution frozen in a glacier confirm that British lead production waned just before the death of Thomas Becket
New calculations show that the ring of light surrounding a black hole is actually made up of infinite subrings that can’t be seen with current technology
The bright blue pigment that adorns the Bust of Nefertiti’s crown can now be used to study molecular biology
Female dolphins, it seems, aren’t immune to the allure of a harmonizing boy band
The new wound further diminishes Earth’s protective shield against damaging solar radiation
New research details the first forensic investigation of the Sylt concentration camp, located on the Channel Island of Alderney, since the end of WWII
The Internet Archive describes the downloadable collection of more than one million books as a library, but critics call it piracy
Over his five-decade-plus career, the "Strega Nona" author contributed to more than 270 books
The impact that created Pluto’s 'heart' may have rippled through its ocean and damaged its rear
Hailing from all over Australia, the spiders were identified by a scientist who used to fear them
Storms reveal, then hide, the ship's sand-covered remains every decade or so
The Getty Museum hopes its social media challenge will spark inspiration amid the COVID-19 pandemic
The bacterial strain can break down some of the toxic components of polyurethane plastic
Architects and designers restored royal ruins across Europe to their former glory
Hundreds of museums are participating in an online attempt to spread joy as COVID-19 keeps their galleries empty
Despite the name, moon won’t have a rosy hue. The name alludes to flowers that bloom in April
Thieves pilfered "The Parsonage Garden at Nuenen in Spring 1884" from the Singer Laren in the early hours of Monday morning
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