A 430-million-year-old fossil reveals that the first leeches were ocean predators, not bloodsuckers. The discovery radically shifts the timeline of leech evolution by more than 200 million years.
The St. Louis-based company announced Thursday that the facility, which produces Budweiser, Bud Light and other core brands, ...
Archeologists say they have finally cracked the 6,000-year-old mystery of Armenia’s “dragon stones" – massive carved ...
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The Oregon Ducks have one of the most talented rosters in the country and it’s propelled them to the No. 5 ranking in this year’s College Football Playoff. Nume ...
"​I think the reason this bidding is approaching $100 billion-plus is the content library and the potential to do a ...
The “Colorado Dinosaurs” program runs through Jan. 23 and highlights why the state is known for some of the most significant ...
From Texas to South Carolina, a new wave of Black women candidates is stepping into the U.S. Senate race, potentially making ...
National Geographic Explorer Paul Salopek is retracing the path of human migration. More specifically, the scientific ...
For Ten North Group and city officials, the multi-day circuit served as a live case study for why Opa-locka is the most ...
Pyrite found at a 400,000-year-old site in Barnham, England suggests that early humans were making fire long before experts ...
New research led by the British Museum has found evidence of the world’s oldest human fire-making activity in Barnham, ...