A protester was arrested on Saturday after plastering a poster over "Poppy Field" at the Musée d'Orsay in Paris
Astronomers tempered expectations of the celestial event this week, pointing to others in the near future as more exciting opportunities for sky watchers
Amid climate change, drought and aging infrastructure, the largest metropolitan area in North America is struggling to conserve water in a major reservoir system
Archaeologists are puzzled by the 2,000-year-old burial site uncovered in central France
Some of these fish perform obligate parasitism, in which males attach to—and then fuse bodies with—the much-larger females
The Middle East Institute show, "Louder Than Hearts," explores portraits of Arab and Iranian women through the lens of ten celebrated female artists
As two broods of periodical cicadas emerge across the U.S. this spring, people have discovered a few of the bugs that don’t have their trademark red eyes
The collection includes artifacts spanning the ninth century B.C.E. to the second century C.E.
A recent discovery in a Polish library of 27 books that were thought to have been lost sheds light on the breadth of the German scholars' work
Following turbulence on a flight last week that led to one death and dozens of injuries, researchers, flight attendants and transportation officials alike are warning about links between warmer air and turbulence
The USS Harder, known by the nickname "Hit ‘em HARDER," was led by a commander known for his 'particularly audacious attacks' on Japanese warships
Cut marks on canine bones demonstrate that English colonists relied on dogs for meals
It's the fifth eruption near the town of Grindavik since December, signaling a new era of volcanic activity for the region
A new study finds the black-and-white marine mammals tend to make shorter, shallower dives compared to humpback and blue whales, making orcas the "sprinters" of the ocean
The jawless, parasitic fish largely haven't changed over the last 340 million years, but they might be better sources for studying our own evolution than thought, a recent study suggests
An Egyptologist recently concluded that a fragment of an overlooked granite coffin bears the great pharaoh's name
Nash became a flight attendant in 1957 and never stopped working
Three carrion crows engaged in a simplified version of counting when prompted, and the birds showed signs of planning out their responses
By putting an ancient skull under the microscope, scientists are proving that cancer research is about 1,000 years older than previously thought
Six people developed symptoms of roundworm infection after consuming grilled black bear meat and vegetables in July 2022, and all have since recovered
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