An exhibition at the National Building Museum investigates the history and future of the much-maligned architectural style
Some of the 126 species on their list haven’t been photographed or recorded in more than century
The 18th-century poet wrote some of his most renowned works in the house in southern England, which has since fallen into disrepair
Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft no longer meets safety standards after experiencing technical issues in June, and it will return to Earth uncrewed, the space agency announced
"Looted" examines how the Nazis systematically plundered Jewish cultural items during World War II
The Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department has only confirmed seven sightings of the wildcats since 2016
Police have identified a suspect, and preservationists have removed "all traces" of paint
Cannibals have weighed in with different opinions. Some say it tastes like pork, while others say like veal—and still others say like nothing else
Polaris Dawn is set to be the farthest humans have traveled from Earth since the Apollo program and will test new technology in a "radiation belt" surrounding our planet
Volcanic eruptions long ago brought the 2,492-carat diamond—the latest in a string of stunning discoveries over the last decade—to the surface
Price Tower is one of three Oklahoma buildings designed by the renowned American architect
Crews installed buoys and mooring lines to mark the locations of 19 wreck sites in the Wisconsin Shipwreck Coast National Marine Sanctuary
Sphen and his longtime partner Magic got together at Sea Life Sydney Aquarium in 2018. They successfully hatched two foster chicks and became "international queer icons"
The 12-foot-tall bronze artwork depicts the former congressman with his hands over his heart
The infamous signal recorded in 1977 might have been a laser-like beam of radiation from a hydrogen cloud energized by a powerful, magnetic star, preliminary research suggests
Scientists say the extreme weather phenomenon could grow more common as climate change brings warmer water temperatures and more intense storms to the Mediterranean
The bangles, which date to around 800 C.E., are now on display at the Moesgaard Museum
Shadowed areas in lunar craters may be cold enough to safeguard species' DNA amid "climate disasters and social disasters" on Earth, according to Smithsonian-led research
New research theorizes that hunters used pikes planted in the ground—with their sharp tips pointing upward—to impale approaching wildlife using the creature's own weight and momentum
The 2,000-year-old cobbled pathway was likely built after the Romans invaded Britain in the first century C.E.
Page 3 of 977