The discovery of the 2.5-million-year-old Taung Child skull marked a turning point in the study of human brain evolution.
The discovery of the 2.5-million-year-old Taung Child skull marked a turning point in the study of human brain evolution.
Early 20th century cross circulation experiments on dogs paved the way for milestones in human cardiac surgery.
From accounts of deformed animals to scratch-and-sniff technology, Robert Boyle's early contributions to the Royal Society of London were prolific and wide ranging.
A 17th century Danish doctor arranges a museum of natural history oddities in his own home.
The first electron microscope to peer into an intact cell ushers in the new field of cell biology.
Anna Atkins, pioneering female photographer, revolutionized scientific illustration using a newly invented photographic technique.
How Nobel Laureate Barbara McClintock nearly gave up genetics for meteorology
A 19th century geologist and minister investigates a prehistoric cave full of hyena bones in his native England.
Twenty-five years later, the magazine is still hitting many of the same key discussion points of science.
An early advocate of the sequencing of the human genome reflects on his own predictions from 1986.