Cloned ponies (clonies?) are beginning to prove themselves in the field.
The gases help confirm it really was a nuclear test.
How the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization keeps an ear to the ground
South Korean government sites are also struck. Was North Korea to blame?
An explosive past
Cellphones, microchips, cars, even iPhones—there's virtually no high-tech Western product that China's cloners can't copy. Pretty soon, you might even prefer their work
Census study reveals sex selection also happens in U.S.
Launch the gallery below, and enjoy our favorite pictures of the year, all in one place
The following is an excerpt from Adam Alter's new book Drunk Tank Pink: And Other Unexpected Forces That Shape How We Think, Feel, and Behave, available on Amazon.
What seven years of research taught me about crosswalks, elevators, and "like" buttons.
Ten years ago, South Korean geneticist Woo Suk Hwang was caught making up data about cloning human stem cells.
Topics included the opioid crisis, nuclear weapons, and "beautiful clean coal."
We spoke to candidates with science backgrounds from across the political spectrum
A state-by-state breakdown of policies that could change your community.
While some developing nations have embraced e-voting machines, more developed European and Pacific Rim countries have been much slower on the uptake.
Countries like Kazakhstan and Vietnam are taking a swing at imaging Earth.
We wish these were April Fools pranks.
Another step toward having your own reserve of spare stem cells on demand