Jacob S. Suissa receives funding from The National Science Foundation. He is affiliated with Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University, and Let's Botanize Inc. There are few forms of the botanical world ...
The family-owned business and one of South Australia’s best-known brands was forced to shut its doors and lay off workers after 80 years of production. Sydney company Tempo has acquired Spring Gully ...
A bunch of materials called rare earth elements (REE) that are crucial for producing a vast range of tech products – from electric cars to smartphones to wind turbines – typically require destructive ...
Scientists have discovered a fern from South China that naturally forms tiny crystals containing rare earth elements (REEs). This breakthrough opens the door to a promising new way of "green mining" ...
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) — The competition is heating up around Louisville and southern Indiana as high school football enters its ninth week. WDRB has all your Louisville-area high school football ...
Bronwyn has always loved words and animals, and she has the journalism and zoology degrees to prove it. After more than 20 years as a writer and editor, the former music journalist went back to ...
Shudder's omnibus series returns for another fun but disposable selection of found footage scares. A Halloween-themed installment of the flagging “V/H/S” franchise is obvious to the point of ...
When working out of his Boulder, Colorado, office, Brian Williams often takes advantage of its surrounding beauty with nature hikes, trail runs and overnight camping trips. The views at 5,430 feet are ...
Matthias Vanmaercke receives funding from the University of Leuven. The research behind this article was funded through the Belgian ARES research collaboration project PREMITURG (Prevention and ...
A look back at the stock market's dominant companies in 1995 shows just how much has changed in the past three decades. While all three of these companies are still large-cap stocks in their existing ...
Smack dab in the middle of the final decade before the millennium—when some truly believed the world would end—chaos and catastrophe marked a year of strong attempts towards peace and world change.
Gigantic trenches known as gullies are opening up in cities in Africa, swallowing up homes and businesses, sometimes in an instant, a study has found 1. About 118,600 people, on average, in the ...