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In China, researchers studying the burial site of one of the world's most well-preserved mummies also unearthed what's ...
Paleoneurobiologist Emiliano Bruner explores the superpower of projecting images and words that has allowed us to make a ...
"I believe that Jenny Saville is a genius," said Cal Revely-Calder in The Daily Telegraph; and of the 45 works in this ...
The study, published in the Journal of Mathematics and the Arts, reads: ‘For over 500 years, Leonardo da Vinci’s geometric ...
Leonardo da Vinci's Vitruvian Man is a mysterious treasure of Renaissance art. A dentist believes he may have uncovered one ...
Radiography is a captivating profession that blends sharp technical skill with genuine human connection, delivering a career ...
The cerebrum, especially the cerebral cortex, has long been thought to be the important part of our brain. However, the cerbrum contains less than 20 percent of the neurons in our brain. Eighty ...
A group of North Texas doctors and scientists printed part of a human femur—the longest and strongest bone in the body—that ...
Galen dissecting a monkey, Veloso Salgado (1906). wikimedia It wasn’t until the 14th century that anatomy and medical science advanced thanks to the start of systematic human cadaver dissections.
All the latest science news on human anatomy from Phys.org. Find the latest news, advancements, and breakthroughs.
The images that went viral were often unnerving: high-flash nostalgic party pictures of grinning models with extra molars, or portraits of a sobbing Steve Harvey sloshing liquor in a pitch-black room.