Proteins degrade over time, making their history hard to study. But new research has uncovered ancient proteins in the enamel […]

A walking elegy, tiny gallery, and gentle Brutalism — Harvard Gazette
Recommendations from Harvard faculty Robin Kelsey is the Shirley Carter Burden Professor of Photography, History of Photography and American Art. […]

Hot dispute over impact — Harvard Gazette
Sometime early in the history of life on Earth, a meteor at least 1 kilometer wide came screaming through the […]

Outdoor museum, rooting for away team, and alt-rock anthem — Harvard Gazette
Recommendations from Harvard faculty Gaurab Basu is an assistant professor of environmental health at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of […]

Ancient DNA solves mystery of Hungarian, Finnish language origins — Harvard Gazette
Where did Europe’s distinct Uralic family of languages — which includes Hungarian, Finnish, and Estonian — come from? New research […]

Does AI understand? — Harvard Gazette
Imagine an ant crawling in sand, tracing a path that happens to look like Winston Churchill. Would you say the […]

Public servant, trusted mentor, conduit to congressional campaign — Harvard Gazette
His was not a typical career in public service writ large. David Gergen advised three Republican presidents (Richard Nixon, Gerald […]

Getting to the root of teen distracted driving — Harvard Gazette
Every year, hundreds of people die in automobile accidents involving distracted teen drivers. A new study zeroes in on one […]

Business executives sound alarm over looming workforce displacement due to AI — Harvard Gazette
In recent weeks, several prominent executives at big employers such as Ford and J.P. Morgan Chase have been offering predictions […]

A TV show, transportation mode, and tango — Harvard Gazette
Recommendations from Harvard faculty Uche Amaechi is the chair of the Leading Change Foundations and a lecturer on leadership at […]