Interactive, Digital Art Museum Opens in Tokyo
Touch digital birds, sip flower tea and more at the world’s largest digital art museum
Extinct Gibbon Species Discovered in 2,000-Year-Old Chinese Tomb
It’s believed the species represents a new genera of apes that may have died out just 300 years ago
Childhood Virus May Have a Role in Alzheimer’s Disease
A study of 1,000 brains found two common types of herpes viruses were more prevalent in those suffering from the dementia-inducing disease
Take a 3D Tour Through Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesin West
New state-of-the-art scans allow virtual visits to the architect’s winter home and gives conservators detailed blueprints
China’s Plastic Ban Will Flood Us With Trash
New study reports China’s ban on importing foreign plastic could cripple global recycling programs and lead to 111 million tons of homeless plastic
New York Is Building a New Monument to Women’s History—And It Wants the Public’s Help
A new initiative titled She Built NYC is asking New Yorkers to recommend potential subjects for the monument
Cocaine in the Water Is Hurting River Eels
When researchers exposed eels to the illicit drug, the animals became hyperactive and suffered muscle damage
Museum Ties Portraits of the Wealthy to Their Slaveholding Pasts
New signs at the Worcester Art Museum illuminate how wealthy New Englanders benefitted from the slave trade
Charleston, South Carolina, Formally Apologizes for Its Role in the Slave Trade
Some 40 percent of enslaved Africans entered the country through Charleston
Study Suggests Dolphins and Some Whales Grieve Their Dead
An analysis of 78 instances of cetaceans paying attention to their dead suggests grief may be part of being a highly social animal
A Towering, Toxic Plant That Causes Burns and Blindness Has Appeared in Virginia
The giant hogweed, an invasive species, is more typically seen in the Northeast
Teeming Manta Ray Nursery Discovered in the Gulf of Mexico
Almost all of the rays in the area are rarely seen juveniles, which can reach wingspans of 23 feet when they grow up
This Ancient Panda Skull Belongs to a Previously Unknown Lineage
The fossilized skull represents a panda line that split from today’s fluffy creatures 183,000 years ago
Stolen Christopher Columbus Letter Returned to Vatican, But Mystery Persists
The letter, which had been printed in 1493, was replaced with a convincing fake—and investigators still don’t know who committed the crime
The Large Hadron Collider Is Getting A Huge Power Boost
A multi-year upgrade will lead to up to 10 times the collisions, and perhaps the discovery of mysterious new particles
Mountaintop Museum Highlights the History of Bond—James Bond
The new 007 Elements museum is built into the top of an Alpine mountain and features a full-size airplane from the movie Spectre
Before Soaring Through the Air, Tiny Crab Spiders Study the Wind
A recent study sheds new light on spider flight
This Town In Kansas Has Its Own Unique Accent
Immigration over the last 40 years has all the young people in town speaking English with a slightly Latin feel
Einstein’s Travel Diaries Reveal His Deeply Troubling Views on Race
“It would be a pity if these Chinese supplant all other races,” the iconic scientist writes
Where Did the Aztecs Get Their Turquoise?
New analysis shows the blue-green mineral found in Aztec art was likely mined in Mexico, not the American Southwest as previously believed
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