Creating a Water-Powered Hammer Using Stone Age Tools
Watch the "Primitive Technology" expert make an automatic hammer to pulverize things.
Watch the "Primitive Technology" expert make an automatic hammer to pulverize things.
"In our free time, we don't go out drinking. We go out herping," says one member of a Florida herpetological society.
Turning pictures of words into digital words is tricky business.
One Virginia man is slowly building The Presidential Experience.
The ultimate goal: turning our cells into microscopic video cameras.
Experts spent three years dismantling the pile of 70,000 coins piece by piece.
The culprit is parasites, not pollution.
Since 2005, workers have carried out grueling—and often, life-threatening—physical labor to see the World Wonder restored to tiptop shape.
Had the building come to fruition, it would have been one of New York City's first glass skyscrapers.
Before Nirvana hit it big, the band gave a rousing performance at their local Radio Shack. In 1988, the band played a set at the electronics store's Aberdeen, Washington outpost, shredding in front of the audio/video section.
Reforestation promises to bring back old-growth trees...very slowly.
From <em>Guess Who's Coming to Dinner</em> to <em>Dude, Where's My Car?</em>, these films couldn't resist mentioning their respective titles in dialogue.
Sometimes you have to eat and act simultaneously.
"Fire is stored sunshine."
The South American palm weevil is eating palms' hearts out.
The school just edged out the previous record, which belonged to their rivals.
Don't let the rainbow scarab's love of coprophagy put you off. It's a stunner.
Arakawa has been visiting Yoriko, an Asian sheepshead wrasse—called a kobudai in Japan—in the waters of Hasama Underwater Park.
Who knew floppy drives and scanners could rock so hard?
The tips move at more than 35 mph...but the trick is how you measure something so fidgety.
Including a Mini Cooper built with transparent panels.
Your morning cup o' joe can give you more than just a caffeine buzz.
A thorough survey of this population could lend insight into the aftermath of sea ice loss.
It has 1,969 pieces, referencing the 1969 launch of Apollo 11.