The brains of today's birds facilitate a level of cognitive prowess and behavioral complexity rivaled only by mammals. But ...
Less people are wearing face masks than they did during the Covid-19 pandemic, but they’re still a great piece of personal protective equipment to keep at home. They can help prevent illness ...
The specimen, from northern Myanmar, consists of a bird-like skull trapped in 99-million-year-old amber. Writing in the prestigious journal Nature, researchers report that the dinosaur would have ...
There’s a wave of rising COVID cases across the country, so you may need to replenish your supply of face masks (and at-home COVID tests). The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ...
Kannibal Killer Mileena As one of the most terrifyingly looking characters in Mortal Kombat, Mileena is a fierce fighter who shows no mercy. It makes sense th ...
What We Love: Thanks to Japanese-sourced rice extract, this hair mask not only hydrates hair but also protects it from further damage. What We Don’t Love: It requires a very thorough rinse-out ...
Brian Hill/Daily Herald Share Authorities don’t know for sure how a young woman’s skull ended up in a wall of a Batavia house. But now they know whose it is, thanks to DNA testing and sleuthing.
Shah said the updated precautions are aimed at keeping workers healthy and slowing the spread of the H5N1 virus, known as bird ... masks while performing their duties, and fewer than half had ...
The Kane County Coroner’s Office has determined the identity of the person whose skull was found in the late 1970s hidden behind the wall of a Batavia home, officials announced Thursday.
The segregation and disenfranchisement laws known as "Jim Crow" represented a formal ... As bus travel became widespread in the South over the first half of the 20th century, it followed the ...
A skull was discovered in the wall of a home in Batavia during a renovation project in 1978. The owner discovered a skull that dates back to the mid-1800s hidden behind the drywall. Testing done ...
The skull of a prehistoric "giant goose" has been discovered in Australia. It belongs to a now extinct giant flightless bird that weighed 230kg (36 stone) - about five times as much as an emu.