All Science
- Space shuttle Enterprise takes final flight to New York
The space shuttle Enterprise flew atop a jet airliner bound for New York on Friday, where it will go on display later this year.
- Humongous Asian shrimp invading US waters, say scientists
Giant tiger shrimp may spell trouble for native shrimp species, scientists worry.
- How did European farmers spread agriculture?
By analyzing ancient human remains, scientists have revealed that Stone Age farmers in Europe likely migrated from south to north.
- Mars lava unlocks the red planet's secrets
The first lava ever seen in an extraterrestrial environment was spotted recently by scientists. It indicates that Mars was shaped by volcanic activity.
- Plastic pollution underestimated, say scientists
There's more plastic polluting the world's oceans than previously thought, according to a new study. Earlier studies failed to include the role of wind.
- Fungus kills frogs by dehydration
Research shows that the chytrid fungus, which has drastically reduced global frog populations, kills by disrupting the amphibians' electrolyte balance.
- Tiny sharks glow in the dark ... for camouflage
The smalleye pygmy shark uses light-emitting organs in its belly to actually hide itself from predators, a new study suggests.
- Antarctic ice melting from below, reveals satellite
Antarctica's ice shelves are being melted away by warm ocean currents underneath, shows data collected from a NASA satellite.
- California fireball produces jackpot for meteorite hunters
Meteorite hunter finds pieces of a mini-bus sized meteor that lit up in the skies above California and Nevada this week. More pieces of the meteor are expected to be found as hunters scour the area.
- Are crop yields the Achilles heel of organic farming?
Organic agriculture can't compete with conventional in terms of crop yields, according to a new study.
- Spectacular photos capture the bizarre workings of Saturn's F ring
NASA's Cassini spacecraft has captured detailed images of the intricate workings of Saturn's F ring. It appears to be more dynamic than was previously thought.
- What's to blame for melting Antarctic ice?
Like a hot beverage melts ice cubes, scientists have determined that warm ocean currents are thinning Antarctic ice.
- Mysterious 'Godzillus' fossil find stumps scientists
An amateur paleontologist discovered an unusual fossil last year. Now experts are attempting to determine its identity.
- Space Shuttle Enterprise scheduled to arrive in New York Friday
Bad weather had delayed the arrival of the Space Shuttle Enterprise to the Big Apple. The prototype orbiter is set to be displayed at New York's Intrepid museum.
- How asteroid mining could turn billionaires into trillionaires
A cadre of Silicon Valley tycoons have announced plans to extract water and precious metals from near-Earth asteroids. Could that actually work?
- Spacecraft probes bizarre mystery of Saturn's 'weirdest ring'
NASA's Cassini orbiter has spotted strange objects punching holes in Saturn's outermost ring.
- How the ultra-rich plan to conquer space
From asteroid mining to space station taxis, a handful of billionaires have big plans for the final frontier.
- Is it really cheaper to mine platinum from an asteroid?
A new company backed by Silicon Valley billionaires and Hollywood moguls seeks to extract precious metals from asteroids. Is doing so really cheaper than mining metals on Earth?
- Humongous rogue European satellite spotted hurtling through space
Envisat, a massive European satellite that lost contact with the ground earlier this month has been photographed by a French satellite.
- Google billionaires announce scheme to mine asteroids
A new company backed by some of the world's most prominent billionaires, including three Google executives, plans to mine near-Earth asteroids for precious metals.