News

Scientists have found genetic evidence of an ancient group of people in Colombia with no modern-day descendants. It’s as if ...
No longer concerned with adults who remember how the world was before, Danny Boyle and Alex Garland ask what becomes of ...
Xabi Alonso's early tenure at the helm of Real Madrid hasn't exactly been smooth at the 2025 Club World Cup, but Los Blancos ...
The human body is a machine whose many parts – from the microscopic details of our cells to our limbs, eyes, liver and brain ...
Spider-Man has been a major part of US cinema, enthralling viewers with his web-slinging escapades. From comic books to the ...
Iron Man made his cinematic debut in 2008 with Iron Man, directed by Jon Favreau . The movie presented Tony Stark as a ...
A new breakdown of earthworm DNA could help us better understand how evolution works, and it could prove Darwin completely ...
An almost universal phenomenon in humans is the use of child-directed speech, where caregivers communicate with children, ...
While laughter is often considered uniquely human, tied to language and sense of humor, all great apes produce remarkably ...
New research suggests that the unique way human placentas produce sex hormones during pregnancy may have been a key driver behind our species' extraordinary brain development and social behavior.
Cambridge and Oxford researchers propose the placenta drove human evolution by shaping our large, social brains.