The mere mention of Leonardo da Vinci evokes genius. We know him as a polymath whose interests spanned astronomy, geology, ...
Dinosaurs had sex. Fossil nests and eggs, as well as the ways today’s birds and crocodiles reproduce, leave no doubt on that ...
The anatomy of snowflakes has been studied for hundreds of years. But just what is it that makes one snowflake differ from another?
In honor of the Year of the Snake, let’s appreciate the strange anatomy and evolution of these slithery reptiles ...
Can fish feel pain? The debate rages among scientists as to whether fish do, in fact, feel pain or are just reacting ...
At age 75, Vadevino Alano keeps up a brisk pace as he strides through the forest on the way to the Armadillo’s Den — a ...
Cutting-edge technology in a lab at Florida Atlantic University was used to digitize the skeleton of the rarest marine mammal in the world, a porpoise called the vaquita, ensuring that the animal ...
Over the years a number of prominent acts in WWE, AEW, WCW, New Japan and elsewhere have had names connected to animals.
Unlike stingrays, which use their tails for defense, cownose rays rely on theirs as an extension of their lateral line sensory system, allowing them to sense predators even when they cannot see them.
Found in a roughly 350-year-old manuscript by Dutch biologist Johannes Swammerdam, the scientific illustration shows the brain of a honeybee drone.
Crab Museum in Margate claims to be Europe's first and only exhibition space dedicated to the world of the decapod highlighting the "weirdness" of crabs. Director Ned Suesat-Williams said: "Visitors ...