The Brighterside of News on MSN
Did an exploding comet end the age of the wooly mammoths? New evidence says yes
Almost 13,000 years ago, North America underwent drastic changes at a rapid rate. Mammoths, mastodons, giant ground sloths, ...
Forensic audit using advanced AI reveals the objective logic of the soul, offering a user manual for consciousness ...
You can't see, feel, hear, taste or smell them, but tiny particles from space are constantly raining down on us.
Dinosaur Discovery on MSN
Why some dinosaurs looked more like dragons than birds
Not all dinosaurs were giants roaming open plains. Some lived high in dense forests, gliding between trees with wings made of feathers and skin. This documentary explores small, dragon-like dinosaurs ...
For the eighth year in a row, the world’s oceans absorbed a record-breaking amount of heat in 2025. It was equivalent to the ...
Lack of research and development funding has left Australia without its key weapon against exponential growth of one of the ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Ocean sugars can trigger cancer cells to self-destruct, study suggests
From the deep sea to the shallow seafloor, researchers are uncovering unusual sugars that do something extraordinary to ...
Spencer Axani, assistant professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy, is the inventor of CosmicWatch, a portable, ...
Did mammoths, sabre-tooth tigers and other Ice Age megafauna face a similar, impact-induced fate to the dinosaurs? That’s ...
When a whale dies in the ocean, an ecosystem grows around its sunken carcass. It’s an epic burial at sea, something ...
Because animals have a limited capability of understanding human language, they cannot “read” the way humans do.
Earth’s first sponges may have been ghostly, soft-bodied pioneers—ancient animals that evolved long before their skeletons ever appeared in stone.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results