While late M-stars are the easiest places to find Earth-sized planets, a new study suggests they are biological dead ends where animal life may never find enough fuel to evolve.
Clearing water-guzzling and soil-damaging alien invasive plants costs South Africa several hundred million rands every year.
Despite the vast differences in human and bee brains, both of us can do mathematics. As we argue in a new paper published in ...
"Toy Story" and "Star Wars" are back. Steven Spielberg, too. We've got an exclusive peek at the must-see 2026 movies to mark ...
A list of animated cartoon series that kids who are obsessed with animals can watch to learn about ecosystems, animals and ...
As France mourns Brigitte Bardot, official tributes have glossed over her Islamophobia, hate-speech & ties to the far right, ...
A new paper posits that advanced alien civilizations may communicate through subtle flashes, like fireflies do on Earth. The ...
New Scientist writers and contributors have chosen their top science-y books, films, TV shows, music, video games and board ...
Far below the ocean’s surface, where sunlight disappears and pressure reaches crushing levels, some of the planet’s strangest ...
“Bugonia” refers to the ancient Greek belief that bees could spawn spontaneously from dead cow carcasses, and that cow dung was beneficial to the hive. It’s a myth, of course, but that didn’t stop ...
Here’s a look back at some of the AP stories that captured attention around the world and provided moments of brightness ...
The ‘Pluribus’ finale shows the terrifying reality of a perfectly unified world with a single scene, starring Kusimayu ...