ScienceNew Guinea Warriors Harvested Dead Fathers’ Thigh Skeletons To Make Human Bone Daggers A study found that ancient New Guinea warriors had obtained their fathers’ thigh bones to make human bone daggers. They also intended to make these daggers stronger to preserve the symbolic prestige the weapons gave them.by Athena Yenko
ScienceWASP-104b Hot Jupiter Traps Nearly 99 Percent Of Light: What Is A Hot Jupiter And How Does It Form?by Jean-Pierre Chigne
ScienceScientists Are Proposing To Sequence DNA Of All Life On Earth As Part Of BioGenome Projectby Carl Velasco
ScienceBreastfeeding Linked To Genetic Mutation That Helped Ancient Native Americans, East Asians Survive Ice Ageby Athena Yenko
ScienceTESS Hunts For Alien Worlds: Here’s What’s Next After NASA’s Successful Launch Of Exoplanet Missionby Athena Yenko
ScienceNeil deGrasse Tyson Shares Sobering Message About Earth Day, He Thinks Saving The Earth Is 'Odd'by Jean-Pierre Chigne
ScienceEarly Humans Might Have Been Excellent Walkers Based On 3.6-Million-Year-Old Footprintsby Jacob Elyachar
ScienceExploding Ants Of Borneo Protect Their Colony: Other Animals With Strange Defense Mechanismsby Rubi Valdez