Researchers created Itiner-e, a "Google Maps for Roman Roads," charting the network that linked the expansive ancient empire.
IFLScience on MSN
Strange Patterns In Ancient Rocks Reveal Earth's Tumbling Magnetic Field, Not Speeding Continents
Moroccan rocks suggest that what had been thought to be wild, random movements of continents was actually Earth's magnetic ...
This interactive bracelet lets kids track real red pandas in the wild—and it’s sparking a love for conservation.
In just 76 hours, he has covered an astonishing 3,100 kilometres, an aerial marathon that saw him slice across central India, ...
Game Rant on MSN
8 Games That Let You Go Everywhere Without Limits
Constraints on exploration are never fun. These games take that to heart and let you explore anywhere, at any time, and in ...
A ridiculous but instructive thought experiment involving deep time, plate tectonics, erosion and the slow death of the sun ...
When Earth’s ancient supercontinent Nuna broke apart, it reshaped oceans, cooled the climate, and set the stage for complex life to evolve.
The Anno series has been around for nearly 3 decades, yet Anno 117: Pax Romana breathes new life into the city building genre ...
Had one hoped to leave a time capsule for today’s Bostonians in the Permian period 250 million years ago, much less the Pliocene epoch four million years ago , they would have been completely, utterly ...
For more than half a billion years, a giant magnetic anomaly buried in Earth’s ancient rocks has puzzled scientists. The strange data once appeared to defy the rules of geomagnetism, hinting that our ...
Air Tahiti Nui is evidence that long-haul, low-demand route economics can be effective, and the Boeing 787-9 is an ideal ...
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