Rebecca Manzi
-
This cat lived through a 3,000 rpm wash—and he’s still purring
-
Paris reopens the Seine for swimming—then shuts it down the next day
-
For the first time, wild orcas caught kissing—with their tongues
-
Walking to redemption: a new approach to discipline at Morse High School
-
France stunned by rare bee attack in Aurillac
-
Mattel introduces its first Barbie with type 1 diabetes
-
The stray cat who brought her sick kitten to the vet
-
In the hills of Galicia, wild horses are fighting wildfires
-
Why ignoring menstrual pain is costing us more than we think
-
The Chihuahua that saved a life on a Swiss glacier
-
San Fermín is back — along with blood, protest, and the same old questions
-
A 60-year-old sea turtle named Jorge returns to the ocean after 41 years in captivity
-
The Hawaiian Islands are drifting toward Japan — but don’t pack your bags yet
-
A marine heatwave is boiling the Mediterranean — and it’s only the beginning of summer
-
The vanishing act of our attention span
-
Everest’s deadly traffic jam: the mountain that became a queue
-
A timeless embrace: the moving reunion between Citron the chimp and his lifelong caregiver
-
Message summaries: your new AI assistant for overwhelming chats
-
Louie the otter chose freedom over captivity
-
In the heart of Brazil, a man built a house shaped like a Boeing
-
Mexico moves to ban dolphin shows and concrete tanks in sweeping marine protection bill
-
Netherlands returns 119 Benin bronzes to Nigeria in historic cultural repatriation
-
Meet India’s ‘Greta Thunberg’: 12-year-old Prasiddhi Singh plants 150,000 trees
-
Tanzania (Africa) forces mining giants to keep gold at home
-
Chile takes bold step to tackle fashion’s waste crisis
-
Brazilian robot plants 14,000 trees daily in Amazon restoration effort
-
The toxic journey of Europe’s unwanted clothing to Africa
-
Williamina Fleming: from domestic worker to stellar pioneer
-
Indian farmer destroys entire crop in desperate protest against rock-bottom prices
-
The rarest library of colors is at Harvard—and it holds secrets of art, science, and death