A scorpion-shaped geoglyph mound in Mexico reveals ancient solar alignments used to synchronize agriculture and rituals.
Discover how insects and other small creatures rely on leaf litter to survive the winter and how this supports local ecology.
Mongabay News on MSN
Inside California’s race to document its insects: A conversation with Chris Grinter
Christopher C. Grinter has spent much of his life surrounded by insects, though not in the way most people imagine. As Senior ...
Eternia awaits as Mattel is back with some brand new Masters of the Universe Origins figures including a new limited edition ...
In most developing tissues, signals called morphogens act like lighthouses, guiding nearby cells toward their fate and ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Scorpion venom shows striking results against breast cancer
Scorpion venom, once feared only as a deadly toxin, is rapidly emerging as one of the most intriguing experimental tools against breast cancer. Early laboratory work suggests that carefully isolated ...
Backyards can harbor venomous creatures like scorpions, snakes, and spiders, which typically avoid humans and play vital ...
The Forward on MSN
Roswell, New Mexico, Is Rife With UFOs, Scorpions and Conspiracy Theories — But Few Jews
If it weren’t for an Ashkenazi Jew named Stanton T. Friedman, the world might have long ago forgotten what’s come to be known ...
Bruce, who lives in Ludlow, is on a farm-to-table mission that’s taking her around Aroostook and northern Washington counties ...
Autocar on MSN
Sting in the tale: Scorpion hunting in an Abarth 600e
Scorpions have only ever sat on small, petrol sportsters, but now they’re crawling all over an electric crossover ...
New Scientist on MSN
Mosquito proboscis repurposed as a fine nozzle for 3D printing
When engineers struggled to make 3D printer nozzles narrow enough for their needs, they turned to nature and found the ...
ZME Science on MSN
An 82-Year-Old Fossil Hunter Found a 150-Million-Year-Old Insect That May Redraw the Evolutionary Map
His fossils, collected over a decade at a Jurassic site in New South Wales, have revealed a new species of non-biting midge.
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