The drive to Fort Niobrara National Wildlife Refuge takes you through the stunning Nebraska Sandhills, a landscape so ...
Stretching more than 120 miles and comprised of 800 islands, the Florida Keys is singular in terms of its diversity of ...
Back in 2020 when I began working full-time for Audubon Western Everglades as their wildlife biologist, I quickly realized ...
The December 2025 Christmas Bird Count (CBC) marked 126 years of this winter bird census in the Western Hemisphere. The ...
Thirty-three North Atlantic right whales were seen in Cape Cod Bay during an aerial survey conducted on Saturday, Jan. 10, ...
Scott Shaw, a University of Wyoming entomology professor, recently contributed to a comprehensive new book on Darwin wasps, ...
Paleoanthropologists have announced the world's most complete skeleton of Homo habilis, a human ancestor that lived more than ...
A mixture of anxiety and excitement coursed through Keanini Aarona in the weeks before five Hawaiian crows, or ʻalalā, were ...
Survival World on MSN
These 12 animals hunt rattlesnakes without hesitation and show why venom is not always a winning defense
Kingsnakes stand out as top rattlesnake hunters in the wild. These snakes lack venom but possess a special defense against ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Sharklike fish with weird, buzz-saw jaws sliced through the seas, then vanished. Now, paleontologists are unraveling their secrets
The fossil whorls were a mystery. In 1899, geologist Alexander Karpinsky described an odd spiral of teeth, the first known fossil of its kind, uncovered from the ancient rocks of Krasnoufimsk, Russia.
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