After just a few weeks of training, the brainy birds rivaled human levels of accuracy in their diagnoses
Scientists and spectators gathered on an Oregon beach for the rare, messy, mesmerizing sight of a whale being carefully dismantled for museum display
A Yale paleontologist is blending fossil studies and bird genes to trace the ways dinosaurs transformed into today's feathered flocks
Fossils from Germany could help researchers better understand modern bee eating habits and better protect the beloved pollinators
Adding to their supervillain-esque powers, roaches can gnaw through tough materials with surprisingly strong jaws
The bizarre <em>Mortuneria</em> used sieve-like teeth to strain tasty morsels from the muddy Cretaceous seafloor
Meet "the Ferrari of raptors," a lithe killing machine that could have taken down a young <em>T. rex</em>
Marijuana plots hidden in California’s forests are inadvertently poisoning protected mammals called fishers
Fossil analysis supports the argument that the proposed <em>Nanotyrannus</em> is not its own unique species after all
The predators take down difficult prey by curling up their bodies to create a powerful electric dipole field
The newly recognized reptile was thought to be part of a more populous species of tortoise sharing the island
How a creature from the deep taught the world a lesson about the importance of being ugly
Horns grown in a laboratory and hidden cameras could be the key to tackling this conservation challenge
Well-preserved fossils include spring-like neck bones that may have helped the giants get blood from their hearts to their heads
It wasn't too long ago that the idea of "endangered animals" didn't even exist.
The salt cedar is often seen as an un-killable invader. But are humans the real reason this unwanted plant is thriving?
In the high Arctic, hotter summer weather may be taxing insect metabolism
A nonprofit dedicated to preserving old, iconic trees is cloning them in hopes of preserving them for the future
Motion-sensor studies showing how chimpanzees walk upright could help scientists better understand the evolution of bipedalism
The electric eel generates electric shocks of up to 1,000 volts, 80 times the electric voltage of a car battery. Watch a caiman learn this the hard way
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