A Partial Dire Wolf Skull Is Headed to Auction This Month—and It Could Sell for $30,000
Collectors have a rare opportunity to bid on the remains of the fearsome creature, a large canid that went extinct around the end of the last ice age
Read the Dramatic 17th-Century Memoirs of Alice Thornton, Who Wrote Four Versions of Her Life Story
Researchers have digitized all four volumes, which are now available online. The autobiographies offer a compelling window into a tumultuous period in English history
‘Delulu,’ ‘Skibidi’ and ‘Tradwife’ Are Among More Than 6,000 Words Added to the Cambridge Dictionary
Many of the additions reflect how internet culture has changed the English language in recent years
Video Footage Accidentally Reveals the Strange Pooping Behavior of These Large Seabirds
Researchers set out to investigate how streaked shearwaters take off and instead were surprised to discover that the birds poop very frequently and regularly, which could play a role in marine ecology
World’s First ‘Robot Olympics’ Featured Soccer, Kickboxing and Lots of Falling Down
Hundreds of humanoids from 16 countries stumbled over each other while competing in the World Humanoid Robot Games in Beijing
Three of the four messages carved into the sculpture have been deciphered, but the final puzzle has left amateur sleuths stumped. In November, the solution could fetch up to $500,000 at auction
Habitat Loss Is Leading to Inbreeding Among Michigan’s Only Species of Venomous Snake
Roads, buildings and other manmade barriers are preventing the small pit vipers from slithering around to find mates from other populations
Researchers Discover Fossilized Teeth That May Have Come From an Unknown Hominin Species
The find suggests that as many as four different hominin lineages lived in eastern Africa between 2.5 million and 3 million years ago
A new study shows how human embryos reshape their environment by pulling on uterine tissue
Italian Police Catch Tourist Stealing Stones From the Ancient City of Pompeii
According to legend, travelers who remove artifacts from the historic Italian city are cursed to endure hardship. Many have even returned the stolen items years later
Custom Furnishings From Frank Lloyd Wright’s Only Skyscraper Have Been Preserved for Posterity
The Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy hopes to return the 11 artifacts to the Price Tower in Bartlesville, Oklahoma
Researchers analyzed nearly 200 videos and photographs documenting interactions between the various kinds of cetaceans
The New York City Studio Where Artist Mark Rothko Worked Is for Sale
The private unit takes up the second and third floor of the carriage house, which was originally an equestrian training space. The apartment is listed at $9.5 million
Fifteen large prints were probably left behind by meat-eating dinosaurs, and they were revealed as floodwaters washed away dirt in early July
Drones Are Blasting Iconic Argument From ‘Marriage Story’ to Scare Wolves Away From Cows in Oregon
Scarlet Johansson and Adam Driver’s charged dialogue is playing from speakers attached to drones as wildlife officials get creative in their efforts to stop wolves from killing cattle
Rabbits With ‘Horns’ Seen in Colorado Are Going Viral. Here’s What’s Really Happening
Though the strange growths on these animals may look intimidating, experts say there’s not much to worry about, and they’re caused by a fairly common virus
Italy Plans World’s Longest Suspension Bridge to Connect Mainland With Sicily
The bridge, expected to cost more than $15 billion, would stretch more than two miles across the Messina Strait
Science Fiction? Think Again. Scientists Are Learning How to Decode Inner Thoughts
A brain-computer interface has gotten better than ever before at translating thoughts from people with speech difficulties. Researchers are also thinking through how to protect users’ privacy
FBI Returns Long-Lost Manuscript Signed by Hernán Cortés in 1527 to Mexico’s National Archives
The document, which vanished decades ago, includes logistical details linked to the travels of the Spanish conquistador, who had conquered the Aztec Empire several years earlier
A Lock of Braided Human Hair Could Change How We Think About Inca Society and Record-Keeping
The khipu knot-tying system was thought to have only been used by elites, but one artifact suggests commoners, too, knew how to use it
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