News
-
Your Face Mites May Reveal Your Family's Ancestry
A new study revealed face mites – microscopic animals that live on our faces and in our hair – evolved along side humans. Moreover, people from different parts of the world host different mite lineages that follow families through generations.
Latest Research Articles
-
Kudzu: Artist Uses Invasive Vine 'That Ate South' as Primary Material
-
Light Pollution Threatens Success Of Coral Spawning, Say Researchers
-
Pandas Prefer Love Over Arranged Marriages
-
Greater Vasa Parrots Grind Seashells To Make Own Vitamins
-
Rare 200-Year-Old Giant Salamander Found In Chinese Cave
-
Pacific Fisher in Former Range for First Time in 70 Years [WATCH]
-
Dogs Use Precise Method To Slurp Water, Researchers Say
-
New Right Whale Calves: Georgia and Florida Coast Sightings
-
Arctic Warming Opens Waters To More Whales, Increasing Food Competition
-
"There's No Place Like Home" For Snail Kites
-
Humans Are Sleep Champs of Globe? Step Off, Pandas
-
Stickleback Fish Evolved Rapidly After Alaskan Earthquake of 1964