News

Researchers discovered tiny features on sculpins' fins which may enable them to cling firmly in harsh underwater environments.
By the Viking Age, cats with a new genetic haplogroup, IV-D, show up in York, Orkney, and even Galway, Ireland. The Norse ...
Starting from Kingsport, groups of hikers will trek 10 miles a day, passing along an ax symbolic of Boone’s axmen to the next ...
The tardigrade’s unusual body plan and resistance to harsh conditions provide researchers like Bob Goldstein with a creative ...
Adamo Faiden’s new veterinary clinic in Buenos Aires is a testament to the growing consideration for non‑human creatures in ...
New study sheds light on how insects, spiders, crustaceans, and other arthropods evolved their distinct body structures. By tracing these patterns ...
A paleontological discovery has been made in central and eastern Oregon, offering new insights into prehistoric times.
A new study asked three questions about muscle protein synthesis in response to a nine-day diet and weight training regimen: ...
Researchers from Tokyo Metropolitan University have found that the motion of unlabeled cells can be used to tell whether they ...
humans are really good at noticing geometric regularity in shapes. Other critters might have an inherent sense of geometry, ...
A new study shows that like humans, crows can recognize geometric regularity, making them the first nonhuman animal known to have this ability.
There are a lot of people— commercial producers, government do-gooders and animal health professionals—who think it is crazy that the U.S. lags so far behind other countries in being able to trace ...