Some of the earliest images ever taken in the wake of massive star’s death give astronomers important clues about what triggers a supernova.
After a decades-long hiatus, new world screwworm populations have surged in Central America and Mexico — and are inching northward.
Some “clicks” made by sperm whales may actually be “clacks,” but marine biologists debate what, if anything, that means.
A child-friendly brain imaging technique is just one way neuroscientist Cat Camacho investigates how children learn to process emotions.
We are at a critical time and supporting climate journalism is more important than ever. Science News and our parent organization, the Society for Science, need your help to strengthen environmental ...
We are at a critical time and supporting climate journalism is more important than ever. Science News and our parent organization, the Society for Science, need your help to strengthen environmental ...
No, aliens had nothing to do with a winding 1.5-kilometer-long path of holes. First used as a market, the Inca then repurposed it for tax collection.
President Trump has argued the U.S. should test nuclear weapons because other countries are doing it. But scientific data suggest they’re not.
Streams of liquid form drops thanks to unidentified disturbances. It could be the jiggling of individual molecules.
From growing smaller leaves to shape-shifting its insides, a desert flowering plant goes all in to flourish in the harshest of conditions.
Ammolite comes from the fossilized shells of extinct squidlike critters called ammonites. Scientists knew the secret to the fossils’ flamboyant appearance lay somewhere in their layers of nacre, or ...
The birds grunt like tennis pros when generating their rat-a-tat, a performance strategy that may help stabilize core muscles.