Israeli Study Finds Third Shot Provides Significant Boost in Covid-19 Immunity
Israeli study finds infection rate drops dramatically with third Pfizer-BioNTech vaccination
How Tall Was Michelangelo? Surprisingly Short, Study Suggests
New analysis of the artist’s (probable) shoes indicates that he stood 5 feet 2 inches tall
Louisiana’s Poverty Point Earthworks Show Early Native Americans Were ‘Incredible Engineers’
A new study finds that enormous mounds and concentric earthen ridges were built in a matter of months
More Than a Third of Shark Species Are Now Threatened With Extinction
Overfishing, habitat loss and climate change are behind the ‘desperate’ decline
Federally Protected Black Vultures May Be ‘Eating Cows Alive’ in the Midwest
Farmers are seeking permits to cull any raptors harming their livestock, but experts say reports of vicious attacks are exaggerated
Fall Armyworms Are Attacking Lawns and Crops on ‘Unprecedented’ Scale
These bug battalions turn grass yards from green to brown in less than 48 hours
First Museum Dedicated to American Arts and Crafts Movement Opens in Florida
Proponents of the artistic philosophy pushed back against industrial production and embraced handcraftsmanship
The snail darter is no longer in threat of extinction and can be removed from the Endangered Species List
Trove of 239 Rare Gold Coins Discovered in Walls of French Mansion
Renovators discovered a hidden box and pouch stuffed with rare gold coins, minted during the reigns of French Kings Louis XIII and Louis XIV
Mickalene Thomas’ Dazzling Collages Reclaim Black Women’s Bodies
A four-part exhibition premiering this fall showcases the contemporary artist’s multimedia portrayals of Black femininity
Scientists Discover Tiny Tardigrades Trot Around Like Insects
The microscopic organism’s gait may have evolved to adapt to unpredictable terrains
Antibiotic Resistance Found Deep in Forests of Scandinavia
A DNA analysis of wild brown bear teeth shows that the global health threat has spread to remote areas of Sweden
Hurricane Ida Damages Whitney Plantation, Only Louisiana Museum to Focus on the Enslaved
The historic site will remain closed indefinitely as staff assess the destruction and make repairs
Iconic Portrait of French Chemist and His Wife Once Looked Entirely Different
Jacques-Louis David’s 1789 painting originally depicted Antoine and Marie Anne Lavoisier as wealthy elites, not modern scientists
Scientists Discover What May Be the World’s Northernmost Island
Researchers thought they had set foot on a known island, but island hunters pointed out that reported coordinates revealed a special find
Mass Graves in Ukraine Hold Thousands of Victims of Stalin’s Great Purge
In the late 1930s, the Soviet secret police buried some 5,000 to 8,000 people at a newly excavated site in Odessa
Remains of 9,000-Year-Old Beer Found in China
The lightly fermented beverage contained rice, tubers and fungi
Scientists Create First 3-D Printed Wagyu Beef
The cultured cut matches the texture and marbling of the famous Japanese meat
Turkish Archaeologists Unearth Headless Statue of Greek Health Goddess
Researchers found the figure in a 5,000-year-old site called Aizanoi, which is also home to a temple dedicated to Zeus
Art Exhibition Gives New Meaning to the Phrase ‘My Kid Could’ve Done That’
Curator Will Cooper and his 5-year-old daughter, Astrid, invited 15 British artists and their children to contribute original artworks
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