The nonprofit behind the tool wants people to learn the history of the spaces they inhabit
Wild Atlantic salmon can struggle with heat as they swim upstream to spawn—but artificial "thermal refuges" may help them cool off
Based on a new aerial survey and modeling study, archaeologists suggest at least 90 percent of sites known as earthworks remain undetected
Moungi Bawendi, Louis Brus and Alexei Ekimov won the award for their work developing tiny “quantum dots” that light TV displays and enable medical imaging
Known as bacteriophages, the specialized viruses could hijack and kill drug-resistant bacteria
Medicine-filled suction cups attached to the inside of the cheek could be an effective alternative to oral tablets or injections, study finds
An FDA panel discussed the new technology—tested only on animals so far—along with its risks and potential to improve survival of preterm infants
No other RNA has ever been extracted from an extinct species, so the breakthrough opens doors to understanding the biology of long-gone organisms
The little opening for felines has a surprisingly long history
The approvals bring cultivated meat one step closer to becoming a feasible alternative to traditional meat for a wider audience
The new work is a "big step forward" in finding new ways to generate viable organs for human transplants, but it comes with some ethical considerations
The Aditya-L1 spacecraft will examine the star's outer layers and aim to shed light on its violent—and potentially damaging—storms
The instrument, called TEMPO, will make hourly measurements of pollutants over North America that could help reduce exposure to unhealthy air
A gene that occurs naturally in some cow breeds may be the key to helping cattle thrive as temperatures rise because of climate change
The experimental interface allows the patient to communicate through a digital avatar, and it's faster than her current system
No other mission has successfully touched down in this scientifically interesting moon region, which contains water ice in lunar craters
Patients' own stem cells could help them recover from chemical burns that damaged a single eye, a small, preliminary study suggests
Cooper Hewitt recognizes talented trailblazers who are at the forefront of their fields
Electrodes collected brain signals while people listened to "Another Brick in the Wall, Part 1," then computers produced a garbled but recognizable track
The country now joins India in a race to make the first-ever successful soft landing near the lunar south pole
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