THOOTHUKUDI: Karisal (black soil) literature has done it again. Writer Sa Tamilselvan recently won the Sahitya Akademi Award for 2025, making him the eighth rec ...
The music most of us consume today often feels shaped by a sense of urgency. It seems compressed into shorter runtimes and ...
N. Ram emphasizes the crucial role of television journalists and photojournalists in shaping global responses to humanitarian ...
Have you noticed how quickly the way we learn has changed? Once upon a time, to learn anything we had to go to schools and colleges. Six years ago, when the pandemic struck, it ...
India’s defence tech moment is here, but with AI taking the centre stage in geopolitical conflicts, are we prepared for the ...
Indian craft, for centuries, has existed quietly within the rhythm of daily life—functional, intuitive and deeply embedded in ...
A fossil from Egypt hints we’ve been searching for humanity’s ape ancestors in the wrong place. Researchers say a newly uncovered fossil ape from northern Egypt is changing how scientists think about ...
Pieces of jawbone and teeth found in Egypt have been identified as a new early ape species named Masripithecus moghraensis, which lived about 17 million years ago ...
The droppings contain DNA, he thought, and perhaps, even after rain washes them away, some DNA might remain. And if it does ...
Live Science spoke with Herman Pontzer, an evolutionary anthropologist and author of the book "Adaptable," about the science of human diversity.
The environmentalist founded the field of co-evolution, and warned that rapid human expansion would cause biodiversity collapse and famine.
Sri Lanka’s extraordinary biodiversity — spanning everything from ants in home gardens to blue whales in its surrounding oceans — took centre stage at Thursday’s public lecture that highlighted the ...