Patrol officers responded January 18 to Arrowhead Estates and Devonforde Estates after receiving multiple reports of vehicle ...
A WWII soldier's dog tag, buried in Australia for 82 years, may find permanent home in Silverton thanks to a dedicated ...
The cardiology landscape is rapidly evolving. Novel risk factors and new tools are reshaping CV risk assessment and ...
Say ahhh! A woman searching for fossils on a recent vacation with her husband got more than she bargained for when she found a weird and terrifying formation resembling a set of human teeth. Christine ...
Digital forensics pioneer Hany Farid explains what it will take to rebuild trust in the deepfake era ...
MANILA, Philippines (Updated February 26, 2026, 4:52 p.m.) — More than two dozen pro-Duterte Facebook pages spread a doctored ...
CO Landyn Saewert (Wadena) spent the week patrolling area lakes as the walleye season ended. Ice conditions remain fair with ...
Researchers couldn't figure out this ancient Roman game. So they let AI play it thousands of times until it cracked the code.
Researchers used artificial intelligence to reconstruct the rules of a 2,000-year-old Roman board game discovered in the Netherlands.
The evidence is solid but not definitive, as the conclusions rely on the absence of changes in spatial breadth and would benefit from clearer statistical justification and a more cautious ...
This study reports an important and novel finding that TENT5A, an enzyme involved in fine-tuning poly(A) tail length on selected mRNAs, is required for proper enamel mineralization in mice. The ...