TierZoo on MSN
Watch what happens when they come too close to a camel
In this video we take a closer look at camels, one of the most unusual large animals on Earth and a true specialist of desert life. Their humps, padded feet, and remarkable resistance to dehydration ...
EarlyHumans on MSN
Earth’s longest ice age: The 300-million-year freeze
Over 2.4 billion years ago, Earth entered one of the most extreme climate events in its history — the Huronian Glaciation. For up to 300 million years, vast ice sheets covered the planet in what may ...
I saved the best for last. After 10 years of travel writing, I recently made landfall on Antarctica, my seventh and final ...
What about an oral birth control pill for deer, which could be distributed on stands for them that would be safe for other ...
Several massive multimillion dollar experiments should soon reveal more about the nature of these ghostly particles ...
Early spring is a very special time in the Pacific Northwest, especially off the coast of Vancouver Island, Canada. Just a short drive away from my home on the island’s shores, one of the greatest ...
Fantasy fans are better served on HBO Max than science fiction fans. There's some overlap between the two fandoms, but HBO Max clearly favors one over the other. That's not to say you can't find a ...
Fourteen years after Kane saw his first white shark in Mossel Bay as a wide-eyed five-year-old, he swam the entire bay — 22 ...
New Scientist on MSN
Orcas may be to blame for some mass dolphin strandings
Two mass strandings involving hundreds of dolphins in Argentina probably happened because the pods were being hunted by orcas ...
Finding Earth-like planets orbiting sun-like stars and identifying signs of life such as oxygen or water is a major goal in ...
Biologists have seen signs of orca-on-orca predation in the North Pacific, and such cannibalism may explain why some orcas travel in large family groups. Two distinct subspecies of orcas, also called ...
Space.com on MSN
Did Earth life actually begin on Mars? Asteroid impacts could let microbes planet-hop, study suggests
"Life might actually survive being ejected from one planet and moving to another." ...
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