Mexico’s Chichén Itzá Is Getting a New Museum
Officials hope the new facility will attract an influx of tourists arriving on the controversial Maya Train
Scientists 3D Printed a Slice of Cake
The seven-ingredient recipe shows potential for the future of making food with this technology, researchers say
Metallica Just Bought Its Own Vinyl Record Factory
As demand spikes, the heavy metal band has purchased Furnace Record Pressing in Virginia
U.N. Climate Change Report Calls for Urgent Action
Countries must strive for more ambitious emissions goals over the next decade, scientists say
Are Floating Solar Panels the Future of Clean Energy Production?
“Floatovoltaics” could drastically raise power generation and conserve water in reservoirs, according to a new study
Archaeologists Find the Persian Gulf’s First Known Pearling Town
Located 30 miles north of Dubai, the settlement dates to the sixth century C.E.
Claude Monet’s Older Brother Helped Shape the Impressionist Movement
A new exhibition explores the legacy of Léon Monet, who taught Claude about color and purchased his art
Millions of Dead Fish Are Rotting in an Australian River
Extreme heat and flooding starved the water of oxygen, leading to the mass die-off
Drug-Resistant Fungal Infections Are on the Rise in the U.S.
A yeast called Candida auris has sickened more people over a wider area during the pandemic
Rome’s Pantheon Will Start Charging an Entrance Fee
The 2,000-year-old structure is Italy’s most visited cultural site, attracting millions of tourists each year
Genetic Evidence Ties Covid’s Origin to Raccoon Dogs
New data support the theory that the virus causing Covid-19 first spread to humans from animals
China Fully Reopens to Travelers After Three Years of Closures
Hoping to boost its tourism industry, the country is now issuing all types of visas
These Sea Stars Are Literally Wasting Away—but They May Soon Receive Protection
Sunflower sea stars have been recommended for Endangered Species Act protection as disease leads them to “disintegrate into gooey masses”
Burning Space Junk Creates Mysterious Lights in California Sky
Bright streaks observed Friday were jettisoned equipment from the International Space Station re-entering Earth’s atmosphere
Paintings by Rescue Dog Named van Gogh Raise Thousands for Charity
A bidder has already offered $10,000 for the four-legged artist’s rendition of “The Starry Night”
You Can Apply for Free ‘Masterclass of Happiness’ in Finland
For the fifth year in a row, Finland ranked as the happiest nation in the world
The 2019 Notre-Dame Fire Revealed Iron Staples Holding the Cathedral Together
The Paris landmark is the first known Gothic cathedral to use iron in this way, researchers say
This Dinosaur Had a 50-Foot-Long Neck, Scientists Say
They compared vertebrae discovered in 1987 to more complete remains to make this new estimate
One of Europe’s Last Free-Flowing Rivers Declared a National Park
Albania will protect more than 31,000 acres of land, including the undammed Vjosa River
Scientists Spot Recent Volcanic Activity on Venus
The findings in 30-year-old radar image data all but confirm that volcanoes on Earth’s hellish sister planet are still active today
Page 250 of 1116