Planetary Smash-Up May Have Produced This Distant Iron Exoplanet
Computer simulations suggest Kepler 107c could have been formed when two rocky planets collided, stripping it down to its metal core
MoMA to Close for Four Months During Major Renovations
The museum will reopen with an additional 40,000 square feet of gallery space and a new, more inclusive approach to displaying contemporary art
Drone Captures Thousands of Years of Archaeology on Remote Scottish Islands
A drone survey of Canna and Sanday Islands collected 420 million data points, creating what may be the most detailed 3-D map of islands yet
Ocean Colors May Change With Rising Global Temperatures
A new study has predicted that blue waters will get bluer, while green areas will become more green
J.D. Salinger’s Unpublished Works Will Be Released to the Public Over the Next Decade
The author produced a trove of unseen writings over a nearly 50-year period prior to his death in 2010
Women’s Brains Stay Younger Longer, New Research Shows
Researchers found that women’s brains continually create more energy than men’s whether an individual is 25 or 82
Was Alexander the Great Pronounced Dead Prematurely?
A new theory suggests he was only paralyzed when he was declared dead, but it’s impossible to prove he had Guillain-Barré Syndrome with the existing facts
Magnetic North Is Cruising Toward Siberia, Puzzling Scientists
It has drifted so far that scientists made an emergency revision to the World Magnetic Model
80,000 Watercolor Portraits (and Counting) Paint a Pre-Photography Picture of the Planet
The Watercolour World enables users to compare historical paintings with contemporary images of landscapes
Border Wall Construction Threatens Texas Butterfly Sanctuary
Construction vehicles and law enforcement arrived at the National Butterfly Center on Sunday, sparking confusion among staff members
New Exhibition Highlights Story of the Richest Man Who Ever Lived
Read about Mansa Musa, emperor of Mali, who once disrupted Egypt’s economy just by passing through
The Himalayas Could Lose Two-Thirds of Its Glaciers by 2100
Even if the most ambitious global climate targets are met, the Asian mountain range is poised to lose at least one-third of its glaciers
Flushing the Toilet Is the First Step in Making Better Bricks
Incorporating biosolids from sewage treatment plants into bricks makes more insulating bricks and keeps the sterilized sewage out of landfills
The Travel Company Making Machu Picchu Wheelchair Accessible
Wheel the World offers travelers specialized wheelchairs that can traverse difficult terrain
A Horde of Elephant Seals Conquered a California Beach During the Shutdown
They shall leave when it pleases them
Princess Margaret’s Iconic 21st Birthday Dress Goes on Display
The gown is the centerpiece of a new exhibition on Christian Dior at the Victoria and Albert Museum
The Oxford English Dictionary Wants Your Work-Related Slang
You can submit entries through an online form or tweet it with the hashtag #wordsatwork
Climate Change May Cause Increased Rates of Heart Defects in Babies
A new study predicts that increases in maternal heat exposure across the United States will lead to 7,000 additional cases of congenital heart defects
Pandas Weren’t Always Picky Eaters
A new study suggests the all-bamboo diet was adopted in the recent past, not millions of years ago
Oldest Evidence of British Beer Found in Highway Dig
Charred residues show cracked grain and starch molecules likely used as part of a beer brewing session in 400 B.C.
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