Research on an 18th and 19th century Finnish population suggests that agriculture and monogamy may not have stopped human evolution.
Research on an 18th and 19th century Finnish population suggests that agriculture and monogamy may not have stopped human evolution.
A genetic analysis reveals that the polar bear split from the brown bear some 600,000 years ago.
Scientists show that manmade nucleic acids can replicate and evolve, ushering in a new era in synthetic biology.
Researchers weaken the memories of drug use in recovering addicts.
A new law opens the door to teaching creationism and climate change denialism in the state's public schools.
Social insect soldiers not only protect the colony from insect invasions; some also secrete strong antifungal compounds to kill microscopic enemies.
A genomic analysis reveals a crucial detail in drug-resistant strains of the malaria parasite that are on the move in Southeast Asia.
Researchers discover a 70-million-year-old egg that belonged to a small, bird-like meat-eating dinosaur.
The Dutch artist's sunflower paintings have attracted the attention of doctors and geneticists.
One of the researchers who created a highly transmissible form of the bird flu virus has broken his silence and shared which mutations made it possible.