All Science
- Jurassic World: Top 5 inaccuracies in movie, according to paleontologists
'Jurassic World' was this weekend's big box office winner. But is the science accurate?
- Have scientists found the little lost comet lander Philae?
Rosetta's Philae – the European Space Agency’s long-lost comet lander – may have been found on the surface of Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.
- Why are polar bears adding dolphins to their diet?
Polar bears have been spotted eating white-beaked dolphins on Svalbard, a group of Norwegian islands in the Arctic Ocean. Another example of how global warming is changing habitats and diets.
- Mysterious earthquake swarms in Alabama. What's going on?
Since last November, at least 14 earthquakes have been recorded in rural Alabama. If it's not fracking, why is the ground shaking?
- Are moths smarter than we think?
Scientists use infrared cameras and 3-D printed flowers to study moths, hoping the moths can show them how to build better flying robots.
- How the Japanese art of paper cutting can make stretchable batteries
Kirigami batteries? A team of scientists at Arizona State University finds an intersection between art and technology, creating stretchable batteries designed through kirigami.
- Why US might protect 38,000 miles of coral habitat in middle of Atlantic
The region in question includes 27 deep-sea canyons that have so far been spared from bottom-trawling but could face new threats as fishing trends evolve.
- Should scientists bring back woolly mammoths?
Some scientists want to create a new mammoth-elephant hybrid. But at what cost?
- 15-year-old discovers planet. Why do children make such great astronomers?
Seventeen-year-old Tom Wagg of England discovered a new planet when he was just 15 years old. Studies show that children are more curious than adults. Could that make them better astronomers?
- Trio of astronauts return to Earth from space station
Three astronauts are back on Earth after a Russian Soyuz spacecraft landed them in Kazakhstan after six months aboard the International Space Station.
- Science NotebookScientists discover the 'return trip effect' is only felt retrospectively
A team of scientists at Kyoto University discover that homeward bound trips feel shorter than outward bound trips, but only after the trip is complete.
- Nobel laureate resigns after controversial remark: Is academia sexist?
British scientist Tim Hunt said he was being honest when discussing his trouble with women in the lab. From a job and wage standpoint, women reportedly are still having problems in the world of math and science education.
- Three astronauts return to Earth from space station
NASA's Terry Virts, Russia's Anton Shkaplerov, and the ESA's Samantha Cristoforetti touched down in a Soyuz capsule on the steppes of Kazakhstan Thursday.
- Scientists unlock secrets of Saturn's humongous dust ring
The enormous ring encircling Saturn is 20 million miles across but is almost entirely made up of particles that are just 10 millionths of a meter wide.
- How another Russian spacecraft glitch rattled the space station
2017 is shaping up to be a landmark year for American spaceflight, and experts say it couldn't get here soon enough.
- Galactic growth seen in far reaches of the universe
With Chile's ALMA telescope, astronomers have obtained "unprecedented" images of star formation in a distant galaxy.
- ESO astronomers capture cosmic 'butterfly'
Astronomers at the European Southern Observatory have captured images of a butterfly nebula, generated as a dying star spews dust into the cosmos.
- Fossilized dinosaur blood? Blood cells found in 75-million-year-old bones.
Fossilized dinosaur blood: Researchers from Imperial College London have discovered what appears to be soft tissue in otherwise unremarkable bone fragments.
- Scientists find wild chimps go ape over drinking
Researchers have observed wild chimpanzees habitually consuming alcohol, lending support to the so-called Drunken Monkey Hypothesis.
- Nobel laureate says female scientists are 'trouble' in the lab
Nobel winner Tim Hunt drew wide criticism after he said that female scientists cause trouble for men in the lab.