The amber-listed Manx Shearwater has bred on Rathlin Island for the first time in decades. And hopes are now high that their population will grow again. The bird was once present on the island in ...
WASHINGTON, Oct. 13 (Yonhap) -- More than a dozen South Korean firms showcased their high-tech military products at an ...
This is a list of ten extraordinary creatures and the hard science of their powers. From electric eels that generate hundreds ...
Hameroff points to studies that demonstrate that, in humans, applying sub-thermal tFUS to the hippocampus of Alzheimer’s ...
Determining the diversity and distribution of species in an ecosystem is essential to creating a baseline for monitoring ...
LUDOWICI, Ga. (WTOC) - [UPDATE 9/19/2025] A missing horse in Ludowici was found alive and well by drone late Thursday night. Animal control was notified Monday about a horse that got away from its ...
A new fast and convenient approach to scintigraphy-based monitoring allows physicians to efficiently and reliably assess ...
Lawsuits against Harvard in relation to a macabre scheme that led human body parts to be sold out of the morgue for several years may move forward, the Supreme Judicial Court ruled Monday. “Harvard’s ...
BOSTON - Harvard University can be sued by families alleging it mishandled the bodies of loved ones donated to its medical school and whose parts were then sold on the black market by the former ...
In nature, survival often depends on smart tricks and hidden abilities. While humans replace old skin cells quietly and almost unnoticed, many animals go through much bigger and more dramatic changes.
Rachel Feltman: For Scientific American’s Science Quickly, I’m Rachel Feltman. Humans have been trying to replace ailing parts of our bodies for thousands of years, turning to prosthetic limbs, ...
As a kid of the 1970s, Mary Roach sat in front of the TV watching “The Six Million Dollar Man” promise a techno-rebirth. “We can rebuild him,” the narrator intoned. “Better than he was before. Better.