Cornell University researchers have published a new study which shows how the toothy, lighting-fast barracuda attacks its prey -- it slices it in half, scissor-style.
Dogs may be more like humans than previously thought. A new study shows how dogs are able to mimic human behavior, which may shed light into what makes humans behavior unique. Kasey-Dee Gardner reports.
Archaeologist Julie Schablitsky digs for the truth behind historic sites, even if that means debunking a few myths along the way. Jorge Ribas gets the facts about one location.
Standing water makes a perfect home for mosquitos to breed, and thunderstorms can dump buckets of water in the summer months. Kasey-Dee Gardner finds out if a wet summer will lead to a mosquito boom.
Can you REALLY tell if your friend is lying to you? As it turns out, probably not. James Williams isn't lying when he says deception is a tricky thing.
This Week in Discovery News we explore a court ruling in Maryland that classify pit bulls as "inherently dangerous," the final debunking of the Mayan doomsday by the Mayans themselves and the TIME cover breast-feeding controversy from last week. ...
This Week in Discovery News we explore if humans are still evolving, assess whether we want to take a ride on the Titanic II and check into Al Qaeda's use of a porn video to store coded messages.
This Week in Discovery News we peek into a future where sex robots run the prostitution industry. Plus, we debunk pet psychics and recap stories of a fireball that exploded over central California.
Leonardo Da Vinci used mirrors to hide biblical images in his most famous masterpieces, according to a controversial new book. Discovery News' Rossella Lorenzi reports.
There are millions of shipwrecks on the ocean floor, but not all are valuable. Kasey-Dee Gardner finds out how to determine a ship's value when it can't be seen.
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