3

This 'Secret Garden' is made entirely from denim

Artist Ian Berry's creation is made from the most familiar of materials.



  • Arts & Culture

3

How early humans created the paintings found in France's Chauvet cave

The Chauvet paintings in France are a study in humanity's connection to animals, the earth, and each other over time.



  • Arts & Culture

3

How one man's mission to save an island created an inspiring retreat for artists

Rabbit Island residency programs encourage artists to incorporate conservation, ecology and sustainability into their work.



  • Arts & Culture

3

Why won't GM innovate?

Well, after months of hard work with the best advisors money can buy, Ford & GM announced a bold strategy to revive their ailing industry — more government lo



  • Research & Innovations

3

Why physicists hate calling Higgs boson the 'God particle'

Physicists love the Higgs boson, but they hate the God particle. The elusive Higgs particle, which scientists at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) particle accele



  • Research & Innovations

3

Higgs boson: 5 implications of the elusive particle's possible discovery

Physicists at the world's largest atom smasher announced on July 4 that they are more than 99 percent sure they've found a new, and heavy, boson particle, that



  • Research & Innovations

3

Should the Higgs boson win the 2013 Nobel Prize?

The 2013 Nobel Prize in physics will be announced next week, and while the identity of the winner (or winners) is a closely guarded secret.



  • Research & Innovations

3

What's your sleep IQ?

Are you a mastermind when it comes to slumber? Test your sleep smarts here.



  • Fitness & Well-Being

3

10 things you didn't know about Nelson Mandela

He may be one of the most famous men who ever lived, but there's plenty to learn about Nelson Mandela.




3

13 wild milestones for women in the Olympics

From confounding dress codes to exclusion from many events, the road to gold for women has had plenty of quirky twists.



  • Arts & Culture

3

These awful things can happen when you don't clean your contacts properly

Do you ever ignore your contact lens care instructions? You may want to rethink that.



  • Fitness & Well-Being

3

22 things you didn't know about hedgehogs

Beyond their undeniable cuteness, there's a lot more to discover about these wonderfully odd creatures.




3

11 Christmas traditions we don't have in the U.S.

In which we reveal that charming Swedish girls wear lightbulb crowns and Austrian men dress like furry devils.



  • Arts & Culture

3

11 things you didn't know about alpacas

There's more to an alpaca than their quirky good looks. Did you know the fiber from their fleece is flame-resistant? Here are 11 alpaca facts you may not know.




3

3 psychological tricks to help you lose weight

Calories and exercise are key, of course, but these research-backed workarounds can help you reach your goals.



  • Fitness & Well-Being

3

A user's guide to smart sunscreen use

From what the new labels mean to how to properly apply it, here are the essentials to help keep your skin healthy in the sun.



  • Fitness & Well-Being

3

Is 'global warming' the right term to use?

Instead of 'climate change' or 'global warming,' new research finds another term might be more effective in capturing people's attention.



  • Climate & Weather

3

10 things you didn't know about koalas

Koalas aren't bears and they rarely drink water.




3

17 things you didn't know about zebras

From their smart stripes to the power of their kicks, behold the wonders of zebras.




3

Meet Julia, Sesame Street's first kid with autism

Julia is part of Sesame Street's campaign to help kids with autism feel loved and accepted.




3

In 'Drawdown,' Paul Hawken ditches the rhetoric to offer 100 practical climate solutions

Paul Hawken's latest book, 'Drawdown: The Most Comprehensive Plan Ever Proposed to Reverse Global Warming,' focuses on fixes rather than fighting.



  • Wilderness & Resources

3

World's oldest 'comic book' boasts an all-woman cast, plenty of good vs. evil

"Psychomachia," a medieval epic poem, may be the first, and certainly most brutal, comic book.



  • Arts & Culture

3

Popularity doesn't really matter for adults — or does it?

A new book, "Popular: The Power of Likability in a Status-Obsessed World," suggests that status matters throughout life, not just in high school.




3

Two new 'Harry Potter' books to hit stores in fall

Two new books will commemorate the 20th anniversary of the publication of the first 'Harry Potter' book.




3

How a Bronx teacher started a green classroom revolution that's spreading across the U.S.

Stephen Ritz, author of 'The Power of a Plant,' developed a curriculum for indoor gardening that is changing lives and improving schools.



  • Organic Farming & Gardening

3

Scott Kelly's new memoir takes the romance out of living in space

In his book, "Endurance," astronaut Scott Kelly lays bare the highs and lows of living through NASA's longest single spaceflight.




3

Are baby boomers 'a generation of sociopaths'?

Should baby boomers be blamed for stealing our kids' futures? Author Bruce Gibney thinks so — and he has a point.




3

Why an all-girl remake of 'Lord of the Flies' make sense

A new, all-girl 'Lord of the Flies' movie is in the works, making this the right time to ditch some of the gendered assumptions we have about kids.



  • Arts & Culture

3

Too many unread books? You have an 'antilibrary,' and that's a good thing

Even if you haven't read some of the books in your library, they are still doing you good.



  • Arts & Culture

3

Treasures I found in my mom's old cookbook

These vintage recipes ripped from magazines and the back of boxes are a snapshot of a culinary era.




3

Why do you eat what you eat? It's complicated

Rachel Herz explains the science behind our relationship with the food we eat in her new book, "Why You Eat What You Eat."




3

Life is a comic strip — so let's laugh

Chris Grady's Lunarbaboon comics show off the sweet and sour sides of parenting and life.




3

One of Stephen Hawking's last broadcasts was a hilarious 'Hitchhikers' cameo

The late renowned physicist Stephen Hawking joined BBC Radio 4's 'Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy' as the voice of an intelligent and powerful being.



  • Arts & Culture

3

'Look Big' takes a humorous yet helpful approach to wild animal encounters

From a moose to a tick, from a coyote to a cockroach, author Rachel Levin walks us through what to do in her book, "Look Big."




3

Where does the term 'cold turkey' come from?

The phrase 'cold turkey' has nothing to do with a turkey that's shivering from the cold.



  • Arts & Culture

3

'Gondolin' marks the end of Tolkien's reign

The end has come for new stories about Middle-earth, but there will never be an end to how they will inspire.



  • Arts & Culture

3

At this library, it's humans on loan, not books

By 'borrowing' someone from the Human Library, you get to learn their story — and share their humanity.



  • Arts & Culture

3

So, you want to read more books? Here's how

If you want to read more books, these tips — setting goals, making it a habit, reading what you love and more — will help you up your book game.



  • Arts & Culture

3

Bizarre plants delightfully come to life in 'Atlas of Botanic Poetry'

Botanist and biologist Francis Hallé introduces a new world of rainforest flora in his latest art-driven book.



  • Wilderness & Resources

3

Your cat thinks you're a much larger cat with good taste in food

Dr. John Bradshaw decodes cat behavior and explains what felines really think of us.




3

Other animals have 'human' emotions, too

Animal emotions can be surprisingly similar to ours, primatologist Frans de Waal explains in a new book, especially in our fellow mammals.




3

The Voynich Manuscript: What you need to know about the world's most mysterious book

The Voynich Manuscript, an illustrated codex from Medieval times, has been baffling humans since 1912. Here's what we know about it.



  • Research & Innovations

3

Why paper books and the independent bookstore aren't dead

Turns out all those dire predictions about paper books and bookstores were wrong — and personally, I'm thrilled.



  • Arts & Culture

3

Destination of the week: Lake Superior's North Shore

Head to this neck of Minnesota for scenery, outdoor fun and a progressive vibe.




3

Don't let Sardinia's glamor hide this island's natural beauty

Sardinia's true magic, especially from a nature-lover’s perspective, is its interior and its less-accessible sections of coastline.




3

Hilo isn't your average Hawaiian getaway

Beautiful beaches and clear, blue waters are a part of the Big Island's geography, but so are volcanic mountains, lava fields, caves, and impossibly high waterf




3

Michigan's Upper Peninsula is the perfect year-round getaway

Michigan's Upper Peninsula is one of the most rural, nature-dominated regions in the Midwest. It is virtually surrounded by Great Lakes, with Lake Superior to i




3

Coral reef scientist: We're losing the oceans

Leading coral reef ecologist Jeremy Jackson speaks at TED about the havoc humanity is wreaking on the ocean.



  • Wilderness & Resources

3

America's 10 worst man-made environmental disasters

Most disasters lie outside human control, but some of the world’s most devastating events have been caused by humans.



  • Wilderness & Resources

3

'Trash Inc': Who profits from your garbage?

A new CNBC documentary follows the secret life of garbage -- from your trash can to the garbage trucks to the landfills -- and our oceans.