In the iconic "Sound of Music" score, "My Favorite Things," a young Julie Andrews lists snowflakes as objects that bring her ...
Analysis by Hebrew University researchers shows 8,000-year-old Halafian pottery sherds bearing symmetry and numerical ...
Soomar's exhibition rests on the 19th-century technique of salt printing, a slow and unstable process wherein images are ...
The Great Lakes Science Center will host science, technology, engineering and mathematics programming in December and January ...
Ramanujan’s century-old pi formula is finding new relevance in modern physics, with scientists linking his mathematics to ...
In an world* increasingly obsessed with “cultural appropriation,” trigger warnings, and cancel culture, one can’t help but ...
In the 2025 competition, Tortoise Protocol was runner-up for the Puzzlers’ Award, which is determined by attendees who vote ...
The Radio City Rockettes are famous for dancing in perfect unison. Their scientifically-designed costumes help achieve the ...
Archaeologists working in northern Mesopotamia say they have uncovered visual patterns that look a lot like structured ...
From morning glories spiraling up fence posts to grape vines corkscrewing through arbors, twisted growth is a problem-solving ...
Everyone knows the number 3.14, at school it is something that is obligatory to learn and, subsequently, to know how to use.
Researchers analyzing ancient pottery from Northern Mesopotamia have identified what may be the world's earliest botanical art. These finely painted vessels, produced by the Halafian culture, feature ...