World's Longest-Living Vertebrate: Greenland Shark Species Can Live Up To 400 Years The slow and sluggish Greenland shark is being touted as the world's longest-living vertebrate, reaching up to at least 400 years old. Scientists detail in a new study how they determined the marine animal's age. by Alyssa Navarro
Science Piltdown Man Hoax: How One Man Faked One Of The Biggest Archaeological Discoveries In History by Jelani James
Science Ancient Stone Tools Used To Butcher Rhinoceros, Other Animals Shed Light On Survival Skills Of Early Humans by Rhodi Lee
Science Antarctica's IceCube Observatory Finds No Evidence Of Dark Matter Candidate Sterile Neutrino Particle by Rhodi Lee
Science US Government Accidentally Sells Lunar Sample Bag Used In Apollo 11 Moon Mission by Rhodi Lee
Science NASA Astronomers Witness Death Of Kreutz Comet As It Zoomed Toward The Sun At Incredible Speed by Rhodi Lee
Science Melting Greenland Ice Sheet May Release Toxic Waste From Cold War-Era Military Base by Rhodi Lee
Science Fossilized Ear Shows Ancient Toothed Whales' Ultrasonic Hearing Emerged Much Earlier by Alyssa Navarro
Science Yellow River Sediments Provide Evidence Legendary Great Flood That Gave Rise To China’s First Dynasty Was Real by Rhodi Lee
Science FAA Grants Virgin Galactic License For SpaceShipTwo Craft That Will Carry Tourists To Space by Rhodi Lee
Science Life On Earth May Have Been Premature From A Cosmic Perspective, New Study Suggests by Jelani James
Science NASA To Send OSIRIS-REx Spacecraft To Study Bennu Asteroid That Could Destroy Earth by Rhodi Lee
Xi Jinping Warns Against Chip Restrictions During Talks with Dutch PM Rutte: 'No Force Can Stop China's Progress'
Researchers Achieve Record Data Transmission Speed, 4.5 Million Times Faster Than Average Home Broadband