Human newborns arrive remarkably underdeveloped. The reason lies in a deep evolutionary trade-off between big brains, bipedalism and the limits of motherhood.
Like other living creatures, humans have been shaped by evolution. Over time, we have developed – and continue to develop – traits that help us survive.
Pokopia turns a popular Gen 1 Pokemon into its most likable version yet, and this should be the spark for Gen 10 to give it a ...
Why “safety last” can unlock innovation—by embedding safety throughout execution and verifying it at the end, not using it to ...
A talented Pokemon fan creates artwork that imagines what Shuckle would look like with an evolution.
West Coast gas is often expensive, but California is getting hit hard today ...
Well, it is alleged that the senate has removed “electronic transmission of results” from the Electoral Act. The media space ...
Nyasasaurus parringtoni may take the crown as the oldest dinosaur fossil known to science. It lived during the Middle Triassic around 243 million years ago, and left behind remains that predate other ...
One writer suggested that there are at least 320 longevity clinics operating around the world; some charge $100,000 or more annually for access to their magic elixirs. Unfortunately, the search for a ...
In response to AI’s aesthetic shortcuts, the photo-licensing agency’s report cites a return to maximalism and authenticity ...
Caitriona Balfe reflects on the final season of Outlander and bidding farewell to Claire and Sam Heughan’s Jamie Fraser.
Five-day pitching rotations have been as much a part of baseball as peanuts and Cracker Jack. The Cardinals are testing that standard.