"Extremophile" bacteria could survive asteroid impacts that are strong enough to launch them into space, suggesting that life could travel between planetary bodies.
Asteroids would’ve supplied the raw materials, heat, and geologic plumbing to circulate prebiotic matter while also creating freshwater lakes ...
A familiar trope in science fiction is the cryopreserved time traveller, their body deep-frozen in suspended animation, then thawed and reawakened in another decade or century with all of their mental ...
Iranian Red Crescent video showed volunteers searching for injured people in the rubble of a destroyed building on Monday ...
Sound engineer Marc Carolan shares the challenges and excitement of helping bring My Bloody Valentine's first headline tour in over a decade to life ...
Sound engineer Marc Carolan shares the challenges and excitement of helping bring My Bloody Valentine's first headline tour in over a decade to life ...
Watch how a retro alien computer terminal prop is created using the Xtool S1. This build shows the process of designing, ...
Health leaders in London are meeting today to discuss whether to stop unvaccinated children from coming into school.
Top Prize Editor’s Choice by Jesse Plotkin, Department of Neuroscience and Waggoner Center for Alcohol and Addiction Research Every year, the College of Natural Sciences invites faculty, staff and ...
Sci-fi masterpieces like Annihilation and Children of Men reward multiple rewatches, thanks to their complex narratives and ...
New research reveals how the invasive fall armyworm uses a combination of the Earth's magnetic field and visual cues to navigate during night-time migration.
The discomfort you feel about your smart home isn't technophobia — it's your nervous system correctly recognizing that your most intimate space now operates according to a chain of command you never ...