4 Expert Tips on How to Get the Most Out of August's Total Solar Eclipse
Don't make any rookie mistakes—or blind yourself—while viewing the upcoming eclipse.
Don't make any rookie mistakes—or blind yourself—while viewing the upcoming eclipse.
What do you call it when two hurricanes start to invade each other's personal space?
Dexter Morgan’s got nothing on optometrist Graham Strong.
Scientists say butt-studded asphalt could be the wave of the future.
It all goes back to bacteria.
Feel your feelings, folks.
Mentally healthy people love Valencia, apparently.
Lush's body lotion is popular, but can it really help you catch some z's?
Did you know Ceres may be the key to mining on the asteroid belt?
But people who report regularly hearing voices are even more susceptible to suggestion.
"From the air, you can see it coming and going. I think that perspective is really profound."
Barred from taking parchment samples, researchers resorted to analyzing the crumbs left behind after archivists cleaned the paper.
At its largest point, the sciatic nerve is about as big around as a man's thumb—plenty big enough to be an important part of the nervous system.
Surgeons may be able to use the flexible organic material to patch wounds and regrow damaged hearts.
The researchers call this the "kinship penalty." In other words, the closer you are, the more you fight.
Members willing to pay extra will have the power to control telescopes around the world.
Research has found that when you stick your sponge in the microwave, you're only giving its worst bacteria a leg up.
Museums are bastions of knowledge, but they're occasionally no match for eagle-eyed kids. Here are five times that kids corrected their mistakes.
A team recently excavated three graves located at the edge of a medieval cemetery.
Global warming has revealed some fascinating bodies, objects, and landscapes, as well as a few deadly pathogens.
Chemistry makes for some great poetic inspiration.
Neil Armstrong, who would have turned 87 years old today, is remembered as both a "reluctant American hero" and "the spiritual repository of spacefaring dreams and ambitions."
If Americans' 163 million dogs and cats constituted their own country, they'd rank fifth in global meat consumption.
They power everything from off-grid rural facilities to your neighbor's home. Here's how they do it.