Ever since Darwin, biologists have been drawing trees to attempt to capture the complexity of evolution in various domains. These evolutionary trees are not only scientifically useful, but works of ...
Towards the end of The Wake, Paul Kingsnorth’s Booker-longlisted 2014 novel, a band of Anglo-Saxon guerillas come across a group of their subjected countrymen. The latter are forced to work for the ...
Dark Docs Official on MSN
50 Miles of Death - The Worst Battle the US Ever Fought
In just two months, the Hürtgen Forest has already devoured two entire American divisions. It’s November 1944, and German machine guns and artillery have turned fifty square miles of dense woodland ...
Cultural figures, including the authors Gary Shteyngart and Jacqueline Woodson, the actors Ilana Glazer and Leslie Odom Jr., and the Guggenheim curator Naomi Beckwith, share their visions for 2050.
SB Nation on MSN
A Theory of the Get-Right Game
In the absence of game-wreckers on the defensive line, we’ve had success with a more traditional rush, often with five-man fronts bringing more pressure from the linebacker positions. But the top ...
Museum of Wisconsin Art explores the architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright through his chair designs, 11 of which have been built for the show.
The Family Handyman on MSN
Bury Underground Electrical Wire Like a Pro: Everything You Need to Know Before Digging
Running electric power to a garage or garden pond? Learn about code requirements, trench depth options, conduit material and types of electrical wire. Yes, You Can Run Electrical Service Out Into Your ...
FOX 10 Phoenix on MSN
Post-monsoon cleanup still underway in Globe
"To be 72 and 71 and starting over from zero, that’s the hard part," said one person whose brother's home was devastated by flooding in late September.
10don MSN
Will electric tractors gain traction? At a pilot event for farmers, researchers see possibilities
Researchers at Michigan State University asked farmers what they thought of a new electric tractor and got a largely positive response.
Nicholas Spada is one of the only scientists in the world using a nuclear x-ray process to study deadly nanoparticles in wildfire smoke. What he’s uncovered in California is a nightmare.
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