A single ancient jawbone is rewriting what scientists thought they knew about humanity’s forgotten relatives.
A newly developed imaging method blends ultrasound and photoacoustics to capture both tissue structure and blood-vessel function in 3D.
The chin is one of our most familiar features, yet scientists still debate why we evolved it. Here’s a breakdown of what we ...
A rare Homo habilis skeleton from Kenya reveals how early humans moved, climbed, and adapted more than two million years ago.
The Saint Benedict Institute will host a lecture by Dr. Jared Ortiz, titled “The Monk and the Machine: How St. Benedict Can Help Us Preserve Our Humanity in the Digital Age,” on Wednesday, Jan. 28, ...
The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Ikeja Branch, on Wednesday marked World Human Rights Day with a well-attended public lecture focused on pressing human rights issues in Nigeria. The lecture, ...
From interactive diagrams to A.I. assistants, virtual tools are beginning to supplant physical dissections in some classrooms Students learn anatomy from an Asclepius AI Table, which merges ...
Sometimes, dogs need a few boundaries. And sometimes, that requires a lecture. And while our lectures to our dogs are mostly in jest and funny, it sometimes feels like they understand everything we ...
This is not the finest hour for human rights, says 2025 CBC Massey Lecturer Alex Neve. But it still could be. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights was created 1948, after the untold carnage and ...
At Valparaiso University, to step inside the human heart is not merely an exercise in undergraduate interpersonal relations or a poetry review, but virtually to infiltrate the powerhouse of the body.