The yellow meranti in Malaysia's Sabah state is 330 feet tall and weighs more than a jetliner
Authorities and international scientists have signed an agreement pledging to release the whales "back into their natural environment"
A new Smithsonian Channel documentary may affirm long-standing suspicions about the Polish fighter’s identity
The September 2018 blaze destroyed the 200-year-old building and reduced the majority of its 20-million artifact collection to ash
A new study dispels the belief that the sharks are too large to maneuver through dense kelp growths
Major ground-rupturing quakes have not taken place along the faults since 1918, but that may mean the next century will be on shaky ground
Robbins, who died this month at 93, came up with the kits that let millions of people try their hand at painting
Scientists found that expressions of grief even extended beyond members of the same peer group
Here's your chance to lounge with the Mona Lisa and dine with the Venus de Milo
Thor Heyerdahl Jr. says his late father had promised to return the items after they had been analyzed and detailed in published works
In a study of 78 kitties, researchers concluded our feline friends can differentiate their names out of a series of random words
Dubbed Peregocetus pacificus, the newly-described species was adapted to life both in and out of the water
The colorful creatures can measure up to three feet long from head to tail and weigh in at around four pounds
It's likely the planetesimal orbiting a white dwarf 410 light years away was the core of a minor planet caught in its immense gravity
Offerings include a book of poetry featuring the epic <em>Shahnameh</em> and a biography of Shah Jahan, the emperor who built the Taj Mahal
166 institutions are participating in the 10th-annual event, which encourages visitors to spend 5 to 10 minutes in front of a single work of art
Sanna invented Swiss Miss, the first instant hot chocolate mix that could be made with hot water instead of milk
Redoshi was 12 when she was kidnapped and sold to the crew of the <i>Clotilda</i>
The last time Earth had this much carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, trees were growing at the South Pole
The gig pays around $18,500, but this is no dream job
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