The president announced a total of $700 million in federal money to reinvigorate the domestic coal industry, which has been in decline for decades.
He mapped the herpes simplex virus genome, revealing how it invades cells. His work also helped lay the groundwork for potential vaccines and gene therapies.
Gwynne Shotwell, the president and chief operating officer, is the adult-in-the-room foil to Mr. Musk as SpaceX prepares for a blockbuster initial public offering.
Light pollution prompts plants to shed pollen longer and stronger, according to new research.
The space agency announced that the MAVEN spacecraft, which has circled Mars for more than a decade, is being decommissioned.
A decade-old treatment plant in San Diego County, Calif., could leave more water in the Colorado River for states facing severe shortages.
Days after the U.S. said it would kill a network of ocean monitors, European officials pledged to invest more in their version, calling it a “necessity.”
Greenpeace International is arguing under Dutch law that an American pipeline company, Energy Transfer, sought to silence it with a costly lawsuit in North Dakota.
The Trump administration is dismantling a $368 million deep-ocean observation system that monitors marine ecosystems and the effects of climate change.
The lawsuit argues that it is illegal to pay the French energy giant TotalEnergies $795 million to cancel a planned wind farm off New York.
A week after OpenAI made headlines with an A.I.-generated proof, a new “declaration” by 16 experts raises concerns that the technology threatens math as a discipline.
The claim that their loved ones’ deaths and disappearances are linked is almost certainly false — but the loss remains real.
Once widespread in Japan, the colorful birds went from being fairly commonplace in the country to being on the verge of extinction.
The Bundibugyo virus, a little known type, previously had caused just two small outbreaks. Now it’s at the center of a rapidly widening epidemic in Africa.
The $368 million network of instruments collecting data in both the Atlantic and Pacific has been critical to climate and ocean research.
Thousands of mysterious containers lie scattered across northern Laos. These “death jars” may have provided a form of communal interment, archaeologists reported.
Severe, hard-to-control blazes in densely populated areas like Los Angeles drove the year’s record losses.
The second full moon of May will look smaller and dimmer than usual.
Despite widespread support in polls, the number of people who actually go through with the practice remains very small.
Clinical trials in China are getting attention at an international oncology gathering in Chicago. China’s surging biotechnology industry is fueling alarm that U.S. dominance in the field is waning.
Pages