The supernatural, like vampires and werewolves, may get all the attention at Halloween time, but natural science can bring thrills and chills, too. From superbugs to glow-in-the-dark bats, examples of ...
While metaverse supporters claim VR can virtually recreate in-person collaborative experiences, the ways users interact with ...
Alcohol isn’t solely a human construct. Ethanol, a type of alcohol, naturally occurs across ecosystems. From jungles to ...
Cities around the globe are increasingly experiencing dangerous heat as urban concrete and asphalt amplify rising temperatures. Tree-planting programs are a popular, nature-based way to cool cities, ...
Liyanage Amarakeerthi Professor of Sinhala, University of Peradeniya  (Keynote speech delivered at the International ...
Let's take a look at the remarkable comebacks of seven more animal species that were once thought to be extinct.
Biologist Kathy Willis spoke to Live Science about how touching wood makes us calmer, why looking at a picture of a savanna is calming and how walking through a forest changes our gut microbes.
On July 23, 1924, the editor of Scientific American, O.D. Munn, and six members of a scientific investigative committee ...
Wilding: What does it mean to be a likeable badass?
A new study finds that up to 215 million hectares of land (an area larger than Mexico) in humid tropical regions around the world has the potential to naturally regrow. That much forest could store 23 ...
Queen's researcher John P. Smol receives major NSERC prize in recognition of the social impact of his trailblazing advances in environmental science.
Crawford University's best-graduating student, Afolabi Abisola Wuraola, carted away 10 awards with automatic employment.