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From old bullets and boat keels… to dive belts and weights. A local company on Oʻahu is giving new life to scrap metal, and ...
An 8-foot-wide portrait of a gentleman's face, followed by a portrait of a woman in a frame just 3 inches wide, are part of the new "Giants and Gems" exhibit at the Long Island Museum in Stony Brook ...
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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNTwenty Years After Hurricane Katrina, Many of Us Are Still Missing All That We Lost—and Grappling With One of the Country’s Worst Disasters
In Louisiana, heat and hurricanes can feel like a generational curse. After two decades, an editor who grew up in the state remembers and reflects on Katrina ...
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Green Matters on MSNStunning Video Explains How an Underwater Volcano Sustains Ocean Life
As the scorching hot lava oozed from the erupting crust and crashed into the ocean waters, a surreal display of nature fascinated viewers.
Archaeologists have studied some of the world's most important historic sites with the help of climate change-but those ...
Juma is one of thousands of Zanzibari women who sustain the island’s marine economy through seaweed farming, artisanal ...
Yachats (pronounced YAH-hots) marks the spot where dense forest meets rugged shoreline on Oregon’s central coast. The name comes from Native American language meaning “dark water at the foot of the ...
The discovery of an unnaturally spiky dino has caused paleontologists to reconsider everything they know about ankylosaurs.
Scientists have documented a first-of-its-kind shark with striking orange skin and ghostly white eyes, a discovery they say is the result of two exceedingly rare genetic conditions. Researchers ...
A group of bumblebee catfish performed a gravity-defying display, swimming up a mini waterfall in the Aquidauana River in the ...
Earlier this week, a remarkable archaeological operation unfolded off the coast of Alexandria. Equipped with cranes and a ...
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