AI tried to write music. It wasn’t exactly The Beatles.
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Often called modern-day dinosaurs, cassowaries are one of only a few birds known to have killed humans.
If we were born trillions of years in the future, could we even figure out our cosmic history?
After the German election, will the nation continue to “muddle through” successfully enough to lead Europe?
Ever wondered what oxytocin receptor proteins sound like?
Civilization is facing an existential threat from climate change. Will we humans make it? Does anyone in the universe make it?
In his new book “Courage is Calling: Fortune Favors the Brave,” Ryan Holiday explores the virtue of courage and how to overcome fear.
This might help you make it to the end of Herman Melville’s 19th century classic.
“The name’s Bond. Jane Bond.”
A 5,300-year-old mummy teaches us the global history of tattoos.
Ultrarunning is a celebration of living and a rehearsal of dying all rolled up in a single intense experience.
Popular diets view health as a calorie-crunching equation while excluding a critical variable: mental wellness.
The unconventional method could help astronomers better track meteorites that fall during the daytime.
Everybody wins, everybody loses, or something in between.
If there really is another version of you out there in a parallel universe, what can that teach us about reality?
Shocked city dwellers who stared at it were blinded instantly, then the entire city caught fire.
The stone camel sculptures, seven in total and originally uncovered back in 2018, far predate more famous monuments.
The cause of the recent uptick in radiation is unknown, but speculation about another catastrophe at Chernobyl is hyperbolic.
U.S. states vary radically in terms of electricity generation. Vermont is the cleanest, while Delaware is the dirtiest.
The universe is only 13.8 billion years old, but we can see back 46.1 billion light-years. Here’s how the expanding universe does it.
Our ancestral cousins far more intelligent than we credit them for, and they did things most of us cannot.
As Russia’s youth welcomed a new era of capitalism in the 1990s, their parents and grandparents clung to fleeting memories of Soviet life.
A biotech startup has received $15 million in funding to genetically recreate woolly mammoths and rewild them in Siberia.
It follows a well-worn playbook for North Korea.
Gravitation, all on its own, can reveal what’s present in the cosmos like nothing else.
With the huge growth in satellites, fears of a crowded sky are coming true.
His family has finally gotten closure after 50 years of uncertainty.
Cryptocurrency “news” is dominated by enthusiasts and haters. Surely, an intellectual discussion can be had.
One day, this powerful tool could be in millions of smartphones.
The EU is slowly realizing that it cannot count on the U.S. to meet its security needs. Has the time finally come for a European military?