The dead may outnumber the living on Facebook within fifty years, a trend that will have implications for how we treat our digital heritage in the future
Callichimaera perplexa, earliest example of a swimming arthropod with paddle-like legs since the extinction of sea scorpions more than 250 million years ago
During the Great Depression, some unemployed Texans were put to work as fossil hunters. The fauna from the fossils make up a veritable “Texas Serengeti”
For the first time, a team of scholars and archaeologists has recorded and interpreted Cherokee inscriptions in Manitou Cave, Alabama
The reason that humans shifted away from hunting and gathering, and to farming — a much more labor-intensive process — has always been a riddle
To better understand the extent of black abalone recovery, a collaborative team is turning to archeological sites on the Channel Islands
Today, scientists report use of “X-ray vision” to gain brand-new insights about the layers of paint in rock art in Texas without needless damage
At Tanis in North Dakota’s Hell Creek Formation, paleontologists unearthed animal and fish fossils killed in events triggered by the Chicxulub impact