Vinegar eel "flash mob" caught under the microscope! Researchers were stunned when they measured the force of the roiling worm swarm.
An ordinary can of tuna looks very different when magnified, revealing unexpected structures and details at the microscopic level.
By cutting into a tiny throat bone, Princeton's Chris Griffin showed that it belonged to an adult of a smaller tyrannosauroid ...
It’s so salty,” a biologist from Utah University told Julie Jung, another biologist, as they dipped their feet in the Great ...
An ecologist is hoping to see 6,000 different species in 2026. Graeme Lyons, 47, who lives in Brighton, takes part in a hobby ...
Researchers developed a color-changing material that alters both surface texture and appearance in seconds, inspired by ...
Food alone can’t predict your lifespan. “Mental health is more predictive of longevity than physical health,” says registered dietitian Eric Williamson, PhD, director of nutrition at Canyon Ranch. “If ...
Fox 4’s Austin Schargorodski reports on Fort Myers’ response to a fecal bacteria investigation at Manuel’s Branch ...
Soon after Strategist contributor Rebecca Firkser found her ideal wedding dress — one that was made of thin, raw silk — she ...
An atom is the smallest unit of an element that retains its chemical properties. It is made of protons, neutrons, and electrons. (Image: M ...
The minuscule spheres, typically less than 5 millimeters in diameter, are the basic building blocks of nearly all plastic ...
That quiet observation helped launch new research from Queen’s University showing that winter-active spiders make an unusually powerful antifreeze protein that lets them survive subzero temperatures ...