Inky the Octopus Amazing Escape to Freedom: Just Doing What Cephalopods Do Says Biologist
A biologist explains how Inky the Octopus became famous for its viral escape from its aquarium a few days ago.
A biologist explains how Inky the Octopus became famous for its viral escape from its aquarium a few days ago.
A couple from Lancashire, England stumbled upon a whale vomit "rock" on a beach, which is apparently a very rare and extremely valuable find for perfumers.
Climate scientists reveal how the Greenland ice sheet is thawing earlier this spring at a faster and more massive rate, breaking previous records.
Scientists reveal the mechanism behind the amazing navigational senses of the monarch butterflies, where they migrate yearly for 2,000 miles.
Scientists unknowingly discovered an exoplanet from a 1917 glass plate revealing a "polluted" white dwarf system.
Vegetable oil is not a healthier substitute for butter in terms of preventing heart disease and increasing life expectancy based on a new study. The 45-year research shows that consuming extra saturated fat does not seem to be unhealthier than cooking with vegetable oil. Some fats such as sunflower oil can help to lower cholesterol levels but do not improve long-term health or cause longer lifespans.
An announcement of the Breakthrough Starshot mission was made yesterday by Russian billionaire Yuri Milner and Stephen Hawking, that will explore the nearest star system, Alpha Centauri.
For the first time ever, marine biologists spotted a swarm of thousands of red crabs in the Pacific coast of Panama.
Rare DNA has prevented 13 people who had genetic mutations for major childhood diseases from showing any physical symptoms of the illnesses during adulthood, based on a new study. The research included over half a million people and nearly 600 childhood sicknesses. It means that a very small percentage of people inherit mutations for major diseases but their "superhuman DNA" prevents them from later developing the disease, and could result in new medical treatments.
New evidence suggests that the extinction of Neanderthals could have been triggered by infectious diseases carried by humans migrating out of Africa.