Stories from Sarah Kuta
The box was excavated from a Roman-era grave in England. It was found among a trove of artifacts spanning roughly 8,000 years of human activity
Queen Bumblebees’ Tongues Aren’t Built for Slurping Nectar—Which Might Keep the Royals Homebound
Queen bumblebees have sparser hair on their tongues than worker bees, which makes them less efficient at lapping up nectar, new research suggests
Colvin, a lesser-known figure who took a stand against racial discrimination as a teenager in Montgomery, Alabama, has died at age 86
See a 157-Year-Old Great Lakes Shipwreck in Stunning Detail With This New 3D Scan
Last year, maritime archaeologists revisited the “Northerner” in Lake Michigan and captured hundreds of still images, which they stitched together to create a digital replica of the vessel
The previously unknown settlement appears to have been abandoned at some point in the 1300s, but researchers don’t know why
Not Getting Enough Sleep? You Might Be Shortening Your Life Span
In the United States, insufficient sleep strongly correlates with life expectancy, even more than diet, exercise or social connections do, a new study suggests
Some Dogs Are ‘Gifted Word Learners’ That Learn Language by Eavesdropping—Just Like Human Toddlers
New research suggests prodigious pups that already have large vocabularies can learn new words by listening in on their owners’ conversations
Elm zigzag sawflies can munch on plants beyond their preferred elm trees when foliage isn’t available, a new study suggests
Could Leonardo da Vinci’s DNA Be Hiding Inside One of His Renaissance Sketches?
Scientists have discovered male human DNA on a chalk drawing that may have been created by the famous artist and scientist. But they cannot definitively link the genetic material, or the sketch, to Leonardo
Man Arrested in Connection With Theft of Sword From Historic Joan of Arc Statue in Paris
City leaders vowed to repair or replace the damaged artwork by sculptor Paul Dubois, which is on loan from the Musée d’Orsay
The released birds are the closest living relatives of the extinct Arabian ostrich. The flightless animals’ return is part of a broader “rewilding” effort at a huge nature reserve
The untitled 26-foot-tall piece now hangs in the seven-story atrium of General Motors’ new global headquarters, in Detroit
Even Though They Don’t Have Brains to Rest, Jellyfish and Sea Anemones Sleep Like Humans
Sleep may have evolved to help reduce DNA damage in nerve cells long before they became centralized in the brain, a study suggests
During the breeding season, white-tailed deer might use their eyes and noses to navigate signs—forehead secretions on trees and urine on the ground—left by males of their species, a study suggests
Announced on Monday, the revised schedule drops the number of recommended immunizations from 17 to 11. The CDC suggests that only “high-risk” kids should get many of the vaccines that are no longer endorsed
Archaeologists Discover ‘Sumptuous’ Frescoes at Ancient Villa Preserved by Mount Vesuvius’ Eruption
Fragments of a peahen, a comedic theatrical mask and other intriguing finds are providing new insights into the history of the Villa of Poppaea
U.S. Military Ends Practice of Shooting Live Animals to Train Medics to Treat Battlefield Wounds
The 2026 National Defense Authorization Act bans the use of live animals in live-fire training exercises and prohibits “painful” research on domestic cats and dogs
The leading theory is that the black leather boots, which were discovered by volunteers, were traveling on a cargo ship that sank nearby roughly 150 years ago
Conservationists are racing to save the manumea, a chicken-sized bird that lives only on two Samoan islands, from extinction
Created in the 11th century, the delicate, 230-foot-long embroidered textile has been in France since 1077
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