Titled “St. Francis of Assisi,” the 1747 standing portrait of the church’s namesake was stolen in 2001, along with several other items
Two new studies suggest that the semi-aquatic rodents provide food and habitat for bats and pollinator insects within their engineered ecosystems
Located in the mountains of western Norway, the facility was likely used by Iron Age hunters to trap and kill wild reindeer. Experts say it’s the only site of its kind ever found in the country
“Portrait of Elisabeth Lederer,” which played a role in protecting the life of its Jewish subject during the Holocaust, sold at Sotheby’s for a historic $236.4 million. It’s also the most expensive modern artwork ever auctioned
Hundreds of Australian Bagpipers Attempt to Set World Record While Playing AC/DC
The performance of “It’s a Long Way to the Top (If You Wanna Rock ’n’ Roll)” took place a few days before the band played its first show in Australia in a decade
While ant queen violence is well-known, scientists recently documented the first evidence of parasite-induced matricide
An enormous analysis of data from a broad array of participants found an association between multilingualism and cognitive aging
Located in Los Angeles, the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art will feature a permanent collection of more than 40,000 illustrations, movie posters, murals, film artifacts and other artworks
Based on DNA evidence and numerous cut marks on the bones, scientists think that multiple assailants attacked Béla, Duke of Macsó, in 1272. The victim was likely unarmed and unprotected by armor
“The Honest Eye: Camille Pissarro’s Impressionism,” the first major U.S. exhibition of the artist in 40 years, is now open at the Denver Art Museum
Footage from British Columbia shows just how intelligent wild wolves can be, but scientists are divided as to whether the behavior constitutes tool use
Scientists recorded a 47 percent drop in breeding females in South Georgia’s three largest elephant seal colonies after bird flu hit. Scaled to the whole island, that’s a potential loss of more than 50,000 of the animals
The term is used to describe “a connection that someone feels between themselves and a famous person they do not know,” according to the dictionary
New research suggests the Band of Holes functioned as a barter marketplace before becoming an accounting system for the Inca
Scientists Reverse Human Rejection of Pig Organ Transplant for First Time
A new study reversed transplant rejection twice, uncovering the reasons for transplant rejection on a cellular level
Miami Beach’s Newest Art Installation Is Underwater—and It Doubles as a Habitat for Fish and Coral
Crews lowered 22 concrete cars to the ocean floor to create “Concrete Coral,” an installation by artist Leandro Erlich. The piece is the first phase of a project called REEFLINE
The frozen remains of a juvenile woolly mammoth named Yuka preserved details about the animal’s last moments alive
You Can Buy the Wicked Witch’s Hat That Actress Margaret Hamilton Wore in ‘The Wizard of Oz’
Heritage Auctions is selling several pieces of memorabilia connected to the land of Oz, including the witch’s hat from the 1939 film and a 1903 edition of the book signed by Judy Garland
Watch Four Furry and Adorable Cheetah Cubs on the Smithsonian National Zoo’s Online Feed
The “strong, active” and “vocal” babies were born during the government shutdown, and they and their 5-year-old, first-time mother, Amabala, are thriving
In a First, Astronomers Saw a Distant Star Shoot Some of Its Plasma Into Space
The powerful coronal mass ejection would have likely destroyed the atmospheres of any potentially habitable planets nearby
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