A woman who says she drove her SUV off the beaten path to take photographs of the stunning southern New Mexico landscape is ...
Lala survived illegal wildlife trafficking in the Bolivian Amazon and now lives in a sanctuary with other rescued big cats.
Malaria is a mosquito-borne disease that is caused by Plasmodium parasites. Patients with malaria experience flu-like symptoms and, in severe cases, the disease can progress to neurological ...
Cast your vote for your favorite of the photographs, which are all contenders for the People’s Choice award, through January ...
Artificial intelligence tools can fabricate entirely new images and videos. But they can now also make much smaller tweaks by inserting A.I. elements into genuine photographs, further blurring the ...
(NASA) The São Francisco River in the Brazilian state of Minas Gerais. (NASA) "How would you not want to take pictures and try and share that with the rest of humanity?" NASA astronaut Matt Dominick ...
When you open up the pages of a magazine—or, more likely in 2024, click on a link to an article—your eyes are immediately drawn to the images, not the words. As much as we here at Car and ...
Scroll on to see some of 2024's most memorable moments. NASA astronaut Don Pettit shared this image in November, saying, "Starlink satellites look like a miniature version of the monolith from ...
The ominous swirling grey of Hurricane Milton is captured in the Gulf of Mexico in this shot from the Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere. In October, Milton became one of the ...
One day in the summer of 1924, an anthropologist named Raymond Dart made an incredible discovery — and drew a conclusion from it about human nature that would mislead us for a century.
In a tumultuous year, they have captured moments of pure joy, political divide, and the overwhelming impact of nature ... selections from the thousands of images that the photojournalists across ...
NASA's latest collection of best science images of 2024 offers a fascinating glimpse into the work that goes on the ISS as it zooms 250 miles overhead at speeds of 17,500 miles per hour.