Most live in the Indus River Valley
The site-specific Wyoming exhibit uses the occasion of the Sun going dark over a small resort town to reckon with commercial tourism and history
Early horses had 15 toes, but life on the plains led to a stronger center toe, leading to life on four hooves
1961, the year Hemingway died, was a complicated year for U.S.-Cuba relations
The anchor appears to predate the Nazi era, but an activist says it should nevertheless be removed from a public park
Where he got the guinea pig from remains a mystery
Ham radio underwent a resurgence in the United States after Hurricane Katrina
A detailed convection map of the red supergiant Antares is spectacular, but it also shows we don't know everything that's going on
Officials are urging fishers to catch the salmon in the waters off Washington
Sheela-na-Gigs, which appear to depict elderly women exposing exaggerated genitals, have long fascinated scholars and amateur historians
A new study suggests that modified yeast feeding on human waste can make useful byproducts for long missions in space
This American institution has changed a lot, but some things remain just the same
Among the suggestions thus far are “Tofu” and “Daenerys”
But the association between talc and cancer continues to be debated by the scientific community
The first 'can opener' was a hammer and chisel
A sarcophagus on display at the Prittlewell Priory Museum in England was damaged when visitors did just that
His broad strokes and large-scale paintings helped re-establish Germany as post-war cultural hub
From humble origins, this ancient punctuation mark has gained new life as a symbol to connect us all on social media
Farmer was the first prominent figure to advocate scientific cookery. Her cookbook remains in print to this day
Figuring out the how the tear-inducing fumes form could give surprising insights into our own human proteins
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