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  • Jo Appleby, a lecturer in Human Bioarchaeology, at University of Leicester, School of Archaeology and Ancient History, who led the exhumation of the remains found during a dig at a Leicester car park, speaks at the university Monday, Feb. 4, 2013. Tests have established that a skeleton found, pictured behind, are "beyond reasonable doubt" the long lost remains of England's King Richard III, missing for 500 years. (AP Photo/Rui Vieira, PA)

    King Richard III's remains found under parking lot in central England

    University of Leicester scientists have made a gruesome discovery beneath a parking lot within the city's boundaries.

  • Hobbits, superheroes put magic in NZ film industry

    A crate full of sushi arrives. Workers wearing wetsuit shirts or in bare feet bustle past with slim laptops. With days to go, a buzzing intensity fills the once-dilapidated warehouses where Peter Jackson's visual-effects studio is rushing to finish the opening film in "The Hobbit" trilogy.

  • New 'Seahorse' sees scallops in new way

    A new underwater explorer hit the seas this summer, armed with cameras, strobes and sonar and charged with being a protector of sorts to a half-billion dollar resource _ the Atlantic scallop catch.

  • Quarterback C.J. Brown was familiar with zone reads and four-wideout formations upon arriving at Maryland. (Associated Press)

    Maryland football: C.J. Brown could have eligibility restored

    Although Maryland quarterback C.J. Brown will miss the 2012 season with a torn anterior cruciate ligament, there is some hope he will have a year of eligibility restored because he's missed nearly two entire years due to injury.

  • Weary passengers wait for flights to resume in Edinburgh, Scotland. A dense ash cloud from an Icelandic volcano raised fears of a repeat of last year's huge travel disruptions in Europe. (Associated Press)

    Volcano ash to test Europe's readiness

    Increasing amounts of ash from Iceland's Grimsvotn volcano have prompted questions about what European air traffic regulators learned from last year's Eyjafjallajokull eruption, which stranded 10 million travelers when authorities closed airspace for more than eight days.

  • Letters to the Editor

    New technology and first responders A few months ago, we never would have imagined that the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) would issue an order in a patent dispute that sets back the technological advances sought by the emergency response community. Yet, here we are ("Patent protection," Editorial, July 17).

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