Astronomers spotted the two gargantuan bubbles of charged particles ballooning out from the middle of our home galaxy
People produce 30 billion tons of material annually, making our built environment heavier than the planet's biomass
The organisms can recover during a heat wave instead of afterwards, and scientists call it a 'game changer' for conservation of the species
Researchers say the surprising behavior could constitute tool use, which would be a first for honey bees
Sit, sat or set? It's all the same to Fido as long as you give him a treat
The new height measurement comes from an updated survey and decades of slow tectonic movement, not a sudden growth spurt
Researchers caught the 81-year-old midnight snapper off the coast of Western Australia
To deal with crappy weather, the black-and-white bears may be slathering themselves in feces to stay warm
Multiple lines of evidence led scientists to the idea that a group of six volcanoes in the islands are actually part of a 12-mile-wide caldera
Sediment produced by surrounding coral reefs has helped Jeh Island outrace rising sea levels
Whales, and other species, may have the same cellular vulnerability to Covid-19 as humans, but experts say the risk of infection is incredibly low
Papers sold by Sotheby's document the British scientist's research into the ancient Egyptians and the Bible
The successful landing marks the completion of Japan’s Hayabusa2 mission, which studied the 3,000-foot-wide asteroid Ryugu
A chemical found in car tire debris washes off roads into waterways, killing coho salmon returning to spawn
A.I. can make decisions faster than humans, raising a myriad of ethical questions when applied to weapons systems
New research begins to unravel the secrets of a strange natural phenomenon in which thousands of freshwater crustaceans march on land
The piece of space debris, called 2020 SO, is the upper stage rocket booster from a failed 1966 mission to the moon
By culturing cells, food scientists have learned to grow meat in a lab without killing any animals or relying on deforestation
Long associated with the Great War, the disease actually dates back at least 2,000 years, a new study suggests
A Minnesota resident captured a video of the bushy-tailed rodent's drunken smorgasbord
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