Why Did This Chinese City of Canals Collapse in the Third Millennium B.C.E.?
New research suggests Liangzhu, “China’s Venice of the Stone Age,” was abandoned due to extreme flooding
Could This Chewing Gum Reduce the Spread of Covid-19?
Preliminary results show the viral load in infected saliva was reduced viral load by 95 percent, but the research has a long way to go
Outdoor Pet Cats Are Spreading a Brain Parasite to Wildlife
It is one of the most common parasites in the world and has infected approximately one-third of people globally, including some 40 million Americans
Stonehenge’s Builders May Have Feasted on Sweet Treats
Excavations near the iconic English monument revealed traces of fruits and nuts
The U.S. Returns More Than 900 Stolen Artifacts to Mali
American authorities seized the presumably looted objects, which were listed as replicas, in 2009
A Mosaic From Caligula’s ‘Pleasure Boat’ Spent 45 Years as a Coffee Table in NYC
Authorities returned the ancient artwork, now on view at a museum near Rome, to Italy following a multi-year investigation
Albatrosses Mate for Life, but Climate Change Has Doubled Their ‘Divorce’ Rates
Food scarcity is causing the birds to return late for mating season, which decreases the chance of successfully hatching a chick
Ten Hilarious Winners of the Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards
The annual contest is a joyful celebration of the natural world
‘Living Ink’ Made From E. Coli Could One Day Be Used in Cancer Treatments or Self-Healing Buildings
Though the microbial material is still in the very beginning stages of development, researchers are hopeful about future applications
Found in a Candy Tin: One of the First Coins Struck in Colonial North America
Illegally minted in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, the 1652 silver shilling recently sold at auction for $351,912
Why Vulture Bees Prefer Rotting Flesh Over Pollen
The insects’ gut microbiomes contained acid-loving bacteria that help digest meat
Archaeologists Unearth 800-Year-Old Mummy in Peru
Scholars are studying the remains in hopes of learning more about the Indigenous peoples who lived in the region prior to the rise of the Inca Empire
British Teenager Discovers Rare Bronze Age Ax Hoard
Milly Hardwick, a 13-year-old from Suffolk, stumbled onto a cache of 65 artifacts dated to around 1300 B.C.E.
What Experts Do and Don’t Know About the Omicron Covid-19 Variant
Scientists have dubbed Omicron a “variant of concern,” but warn against panic
Huge Roman Mosaic Depicting Scenes From the ‘Iliad’ Found Beneath U.K. Field
The artwork features scenes from the Iliad showing Achilles’s defeat of Hector
A Chip Off the Moon May Be Tailing Earth on Its Orbit Around the Sun
Researchers suspect the fragment may have been debris from a cratering event on the lunar surface
Amateur Archaeologist in Switzerland Unearths 2,000-Year-Old Roman Dagger
Lucas Schmid’s find led to the discovery of hundreds of other ancient artifacts linked to a 15 B.C.E. battle between imperial and Rhaetian forces
Using Night Vision and A.I., Scientists Recorded Spiders’ Entire Choreography for Web Building
This research could shed light on how the circuits in our own minds work since animal brains are built out of the ‘same fundamental building blocks’
Catherine the Great Letter Extolling the Virtues of Vaccination Is Up for Auction
The Russian empress, who was inoculated against smallpox in 1768, was an early proponent of the practice
Taylor Swift Sets Record for Longest No. 1 Song, Beating Out ‘American Pie’ and the Beatles
The pop star’s 10-minute, 13-second rerecording of “All Too Well” debuted at the top spot in Billboard’s Hot 100 chart
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