Animals
A new book finds parenting inspiration in the animal kingdom
In The Creatures’ Guide to Caring, science journalist Elizabeth Preston looks to the animal kingdom to explore what it means to be a good parent.
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In The Creatures’ Guide to Caring, science journalist Elizabeth Preston looks to the animal kingdom to explore what it means to be a good parent.
We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
Hundreds of Chinese fossils from the dawn of animal evolution may change how scientists think of this critical period of prehistory.
Tree-climbing cicadas find their perches by looking for patches of darkness, a strategy known as skototaxis.
A study of ancient artifacts suggests Native American dice games began thousands of years earlier than previously documented.
A Utah fossil shows early relatives of spiders and scorpions already had distinctive front claws 500 million years ago.
A new documentary available on Disney+ and Hulu appeals to our sense of wonder to highlight why bees need saving.
Limbless tree snakes can lift most of their body into the air without toppling. They manage this by focusing all their bending forces at their base.
In a sperm whale birth recorded in more intimate detail than ever before, local whales huddled around the mother and lifted the calf to the surface.
Fossil jaw remains found in Egypt suggest that the earliest modern apes evolved in North Africa, not in East Africa where most fossils have been found.
Two new studies suggest that genetically stable dogs were living among humans in Europe by about 14,000 years ago.
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