Scientists Found Fossilized Vomit—Here’s Why They’re Excited
A lump of 66-million-year-old fossilized vomit might be the most famous piece of puke in the world. Here’s why.
A lump of 66-million-year-old fossilized vomit might be the most famous piece of puke in the world. Here’s why.
Researchers captured the first photos of the rare and elusive Pallas’s cat in Himachal Pradesh, India. See trail-cam photos here.
A new study describes a unique behavior scientists observed among prairie rattlesnakes: drinking water off each other’s heads. Watch it here.
A new study details how scientists in Hawaii used a drone to pluck a rare flower from a remote cliff and then realized it was a new species.
Deep-sea footage of a bristled deep-sea worm scuttling about on the seafloor had the comment section going wild. See it here.
Humans know about all the huge venomous snakes in the world, right? Maybe not. New research identifies new species of king cobra.
A new study discusses group-hunting behavior among octopuses and fishes. There’s also the fact that octopuses punch fish that don’t behave.
Scientists gathered extremely rare footage of a bizarre and elusive deep-sea animal, the bigfin squid. Watch it here.
Scientists discovered a new species of parasitic wasp, and its way of life is disturbing. Get the grisly details here.
Researchers were tracking a pregnant porbeagle shark when, well, something ate her. But what in the world eats an 8-foot-long shark?