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Bankruptcy of U.K.'s Largest Travel Operator Strands Thousands of Vacationers
The U.K. government is undertaking the largest repatriation effort since WWII to bring home 150,000 Thomas Cook customers
86 Big Cats Rescued From Thailand’s Tiger Temple Have Died in Government Custody
Although the government says inbreeding, stress contributed to the felines' demise, critics have also cited cramped conditions, inadequate facilities
Once Thought to Be Extinct, This Lucky Clover Has Recovered Enough to Come Off the Endangered List
Running Buffalo Clover, which once spread on trampled ground left by bison, has made a comeback in the Midwest and Appalachians
Help Find the Owners of More Than 100 Recovered Artworks
Stolen around Los Angeles in 1993, the paintings and antiques were recently recovered by LAPD when some were brought to an auction house
London's 'Eiffel Tower' Is Still Losing Money
Built for the 2012 Olympic Games, the ArcelorMittal Orbit has not turned into the tourist attraction it was expected to become
Eggs Successfully Collected from the Last Two Northern White Rhinos
Advances in fertility science will hopefully allow researchers to implant embryos of the species into surrogate southern white rhinos
The Ohio State University Seeks to Trademark 'The'
This article is about an article
Here's How That Internet-Famous 'Fish Tube' Works
The cheap, efficient pneumatic tubes may be a good solution for helping salmon and other migratory species move past dams
Rare Lightning Strikes Detected 300 Miles From North Pole
Cool temps, low moisture and a stable atmosphere usually prevent thunderstorms from developing in the Arctic
Trump Administration Overhauls How the Endangered Species Act Is Enforced
Critics say that the new rules limit much-needed protections for at-risk wildlife
Welsh Man Is First to Walk the Length of the Yangtze River
Adventurer Ash Dykes took over a year to walk from the river's source in Tibet to its mouth in Shanghai
Astronauts Test Out Their Sleek New SpaceX Flight Suits
The SpaceX designed pressure suits are more form fitting and maneuverable than the Space Shuttle's orange suits
A Crashed Spacecraft Might Have Put Earth's Most Indestructible Organisms on the Moon
The microscopic tardigrades were part of a lunar library sent aboard the Beresheet lander that crashed last April
To Remember the Chicago Race Riot of 1919, Commemoration Project Looks to Public Art
The Windy City was just one place that went up in flames that summer
Apollo 11 Mission Memorialized With 2,200 Pounds of Butter
A buttery Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins, along with a couple cows, are on display at the Ohio State Fair
Plaque Memorializes First Icelandic Glacier Lost to Climate Change
In 2014, the Okjökull was declared dead after dwindling from over 5 square miles to a mound of "dead ice"
Yosemite Gets Its Historic Place Names Back
A settlement with a former concessions operator means Camp Curry, the Ahwahnee Hotel and other iconic sites can use their original names again
South Dakota's City of Presidents Unveils Obama Statue
The new life-size bronze depicts the 44th president waving to the crowd and holding his daughter Sasha's hand
Japan Resumes Commercial Whaling in Its Home Waters
As of yesterday, the whaling fleet had caught 2 minke whales and set a quota of 227 animals for the rest of 2019
Hoochie Mama!: An Interactive 'Seinfeld' Experience Is Coming to New York
The attraction will include costumes, sets, a gift shop, yada, yada, yada
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