Humanity may not be extraordinary but rather the natural evolutionary outcome for our planet and likely others, according to a new model for how intelligent life developed on Earth.
Jumping may protect astronauts’ knee cartilage from microgravity damage. Studies on mice show it increases bone density.
Jim Ottaviani and Dale DeForest have sold their new nonfiction middle-grade graphic novel, Limits Of The Human Body, to First ...
A new book explores how one biologist’s work at the North and South Poles changed the way he sees the world and our place in ...
Humans evolved late in Earth history. While this timing inspired the conclusion that humanlike life is a cosmic improbability ...
You might think sex in space would be an out-of-this-world experience — but low-gravity intimacy may not be as much of a high as it sounds.
It’s neither fast nor food, but a spectacular object called HH 30 looks appetizing for astronomers in a new image from the ...
Jonathan McDowell has tirelessly catalogued the space industry. Now he is planning to retire, and looking to pass on his ...
From the daily newsletter: a doctor goes to Mars. Plus: investigating celebrity yearbooks; Merve Emre on friendship books; ...
Jumping workouts could help astronauts prevent the type of cartilage damage they are likely to endure during lengthy missions to Mars and the Moon, a new study suggests. The researchers found that ...
Intermountain Jewish News Editor Editor and Publisher Rabbi Hillel Goldberg is the author of a new book, God Spoke Once, I ...
WKYC, in its court filing, denies terminating former meteorologist Hollie Strano for sharing her alcoholism recovery story on ...