Here's everything you need to know to plan a trip to Universal Orlando's Wizarding World of Harry Potter, including the key ...
In 1886, mining engineer John T. Reid was told the Paiute legend of a giant people defeated by the natives near Lovelock, Nevada. The last of the giants met their fiery end deep within the bowels of a ...
Review - spending a few hours with The Mermaid of Zennor is not for the faint of heart, but it’s worth sticking with for a multitude of reasons.
“We urgently appeal to all international organizations and countries concerned with human rights to intervene immediately ... denied sanitary goods like toothbrushes or razors, and are forbidden ...
The U.S. responded to the lunar challenge with a flurry of robotic and human explorers ... is expected to land crews of up to four astronauts on the moon beginning with Artemis 5.
The idea of life continuing on Earth without humans has a way of catching our attention. Our species has spread across land and sea, altering the planet in countless ways. Still, Earth’s history shows ...
A new human species, Homo juluensis, has been proposed based on fossils from eastern Asia, dating back 300,000 to 50,000 years ago, possibly including the Denisovans. This research uses a novel method ...
But scientists have long assumed that bacteria can’t survive in the human brain. The powerful blood-brain barrier, the thinking goes, keeps the organ mostly free from outside invaders.
The New York City Commission on Human Rights, for example, on its website “acknowledges the land politically designated as New York City to be the homeland of the Lenape (Lenapehoking ...
Our ancient primate ancestors gave birth to twins. Modern humans overwhelmingly birth just a single child — a rather large child with an even larger head. Human brain and body size is certainly ...
As one of the laureates put it, AI's potential for accelerating scientific discovery makes it "one of the most transformative technologies in human history". But what will this transformation ...
In contrast, humans do not simply accumulate knowledge, but constantly reinvent and expand its boundaries. Morgan explains that human openness allows us to visualize and execute complex sequences ...