The National Park Service recorded 325,498,646 recreation visits across 400 sites, which is close to pre-pandemic levels
Workers found fragments of a naval scene while renovating the mansion in the south of France
Scientists are using CRISPR technology to make pigs immune to a deadly virus—and they're hoping for FDA approval by early next year
Baleen whales have evolved unique voice boxes essential for song, a new study finds—but these low-frequency vocalizations must compete with the noise of humans' ships
The distinctly decorated artifact may be linked to a powerful family in the area with ties to the Merovingians
Unlike most spiders, the hustle and bustle of urban areas doesn’t seem to disturb the non-native Joros, a new study finds
The previously unseen images of the band are going on display in a new exhibition, "Elegantly Wasted"
The Eurasian eagle-owl had been living free in New York City after someone cut the wires on his zoo cage last year
More than 10,000 Japanese Americans were imprisoned at the Granada Relocation Center, also known as Amache, during World War II
An analysis of forgotten museum artifacts reveals the oldest evidence of a complex adhesive in Europe
The three-room shack in the town of Avalon, Mississippi, was once the singer and guitarist's home
After a tense touchdown process with last-minute changes, U.S.-based company Intuitive Machines received a signal from its uncrewed Odysseus lunar lander on Thursday evening
Historian David J. Gerleman discovered the link between the two presidents while reviewing historic documents at the National Archives
China plans to send a male and a female panda to the San Diego Zoo as early as this summer, and negotiations are underway for pandas' possible return to the National Zoo in Washington, D.C.
A hunting monkey, 'kissing' scorpionfish and playful dolphins feature in just a few of the 130 striking photographs distinguished with honors in the competition
Sixty-four American sailors died when a German torpedo hit the USS "Jacob Jones" on December 6, 1917
Archaeologists in Bulgaria unearthed the remains of three individuals interred with rare treasures dating to the third century
The report provides recommendations regarding the return of human remains in the Institution’s collections
Wildlife biologists counted the birds—likely lured by the region’s mild winter temperatures—during their first aerial survey of the season
Art U.K. is aiming to digitize and compile images of an ephemeral form of art
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