Cornell scientists used computerized scanning, 3D printers and cartilage from cows to create living prosthetic ears
Pavlichenko was a Soviet sniper credited with 309 kills—and an advocate for women's rights. On a U.S. tour in 1942, she found a friend in the first lady
A new study indicates that roughly half become habituated to the smell of DEET over time, reducing its effectiveness as a repellent
Making healthy foods like tomatoes more palatable may increase our desire to eat these foods while decreasing our gravitation towards sugary snacks
Advertisers love to use futurism as a way to position their products as forward-thinking
Macrophotographer Thomas Shahan takes portraits of spiders and insects in the hopes of turning your revulsion of the creatures into reverence
Life in this legendary town in Ecuador's Valley of Longevity may be too good—and too long—to be true
Scientists use computer simulations to test how geographic features help create intense snowstorms that blanket cities near lake shores with snow
Everything from parrots to gossipy novels influenced art in Japan between 1603 to 1868
And you think you're having a bad work week, just think about the robots
More and more, amateurs are contributing to the discovery of new species, especially of insects - but can they keep ahead of the extinction curve?
This week, watch films by American Indian youths, see Academy Award-winner "The Artist" and snap your fingers to some world-class jazz
Finally, women could breathe deeply when the waist-nipping corset went out of style
The more salt we eat, the more we crave. This new approach to less-salty cooking might help you step off the treadmill
Did members of a powerful society of warlocks actually murder their enemies and kidnap children?
Last week's close encounters with space rocks have raised concerns about how we deal with dangerous asteroids. Here's how we would try to knock them off course.
A video captures images of thousands of spiders raining down on a Brazilian town, but it turns out this event is perfectly normal
There are more than 14 billion pages on the web, but they are linked by hyperconnected nodes, like Hollywood actors connected through Kevin Bacon
Do you know which president liked to skinny dip in the Potomac or who had the first pet cat in the White House?
Drought and over-pumping has led to groundwater losses in the Middle East that equal almost the entire volume of the Dead Sea, a new study shows.
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