A spider living in the rainforests of Queensland, Australia, builds a snare trap reminiscent of a Roman-era ballista weapon that it uses to catapult green tree ants into a web 30 centimetres above ...
Full-body defense does not always look the way textbooks say it should. In planarian flatworms, a newly identified cell type ...
Global efforts to ensure AI does more good than harm must consider how it could fuel exploitation of biodiversity and ecosystems, conservationists say ...
Historically, the modest, dated, peeling, crumbling, decidedly unsexy stock was a gateway to both home ownership and property ...
Reynolds’ weekly column exploring songs and scenes at the intersection of music and digital culture, separating shitpost genius from shitpassé lameness. This week, Kieran ...
A used Mercedes can be a brilliant idea or a personal finance trap. Here's a guide to the ones most worth looking for, even ...
During the first term of president Luiz Inacio ‘Lula’ da Silva in 2003–11, the Brazilian administration slashed deforestation rates in the Amazon, all but eliminating the large-scale conversion of ...
Uncover 100 things you never knew about natural disasters, from global trends to shocking earthquake facts. Explore Earth's ...
Moose Lake State Park in Moose Lake, Minnesota, houses a museum that’ll change the way you look at every rock you see for the ...
A building has partially collapsed in Parchment, according to the Kalamazoo Department of Public Safety.
Scientists discovered that the Australian “ballista spider” uses a silk cone trap to catapult prey into its web, a feat of spider engineering never before observed.