NPR's Ari Shapiro talks with Emily Kwong and Jessica Yung of Short Wave about ancient evidence of hot water on Mars, indigenous people's cultivation of hazelnuts, and an inauspicious fish sighting.
By Grace Jacobs Corban The Discovery A Neptune-sized planet, TOI-3261 b, makes a scorchingly close orbit around its host star ...
Two sets of fossilized footprints from early human species were made within a few hours of each other about 1.5 million years ...
Blue Origin was forced to yank down a clip of astronaut Emily Calandrelli’s candid reaction to being in space after the post ...
Indigenous advocates called the final agreement in Azerbaijan "drastically insufficient." Now they're focusing on next year's ...
It’s time to introduce our hero, (Joseph) Norman Lockyer (1836-1920). Lockyer was a respected though minor civil servant, working as a secretary for the War Office in Whitehall. He had a comfortable ...
The announcement of the artificial intelligence researchers John Hopfield and Geoffrey Hinton as this year's Nobel laureates in physics spurred ...
Meet the Australian engineer behind the mind-bending technology that is changing everything we know about exterior car colour.
Keep these science-backed stress busters in your back pocket this holiday season. Whip 'em out the next time you're at a ...
Explore Thailand's must-visit museums, showcasing history, culture, and art through unique exhibits and architecture.
The Dallas Morning News read roughly 3,000 pages of court records from Robert Roberson’s guilt-innocence trial, punishment ...
Tim Berners-Lee, a British scientist, invented the World Wide Web (WWW) in 1989, while working at CERN. The Web was originally conceived and developed to meet the demand for automated ...