News

The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) recently released an update to the Portable Network Graphics (PNG) image format, one of ...
Archaeologists once assumed that men were responsible for seafaring trade in Papua New Guinea. New research shows how women ...
Iowa Falls native Cpl. Melvin Huff was escorted home Thursday night after his remains were returned by an airplane that ...
Former Leeds Rhinos, Bradford Bulls and Melbourne Storm star Marcus Bai has been appointed to the inaugural board of the ...
Purdue Agriculture researchers are harnessing the power of artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) to amplify ...
See the First Photos and Videos of the Rare Subalpine Woolly Rat, a Massive but Elusive Rodent in New Guinea’s Mountains Working with local Indigenous people, biologist František Vejmělka ...
Papua New Guinea will enter the Telstra Premiership in 2028, as either the 18th or 19th team, and as part of the $600 million growth plan backed by the Australian Federal government, key ...
Shells were legal currency in Papua New Guinea until 1933, and they’re still used to purchase brides and settle blood feuds. The local currency is still called the kina.
New Zealand authorities also did not issue a warning. A boy plays on a beach in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea on November 13, 2018. AFP/Getty Images What is the Pacific 'Ring of Fire'?
Papua New Guinea has long been tarred by outdated tropes that paint its people as savages. Historically, cannibalism has been documented among a small number of tribes in remote parts of Papua New ...
Papua New Guinea’s police minister has condemned “horrific” claims of cannibalism swirling on social media, vowing “such barbarity” would not define the Pacific nation.