collision
-
Road Design, Traffic Volume, and Animal Behavior Affect Wildlife-Vehicle Collisions
According to a 2008 study, wildlife-vehicle collisions cost an estimated $8.4 billion in damages, with more than 58,000 people injured and 440 deaths occurring annually. These numbers continue to increase as urban sprawl expands and human–wildlife interactions increase. For many folks, wildlife-vehicle collisions are becoming a part of life. This is especially dangerous with days getting darker earlier.
Latest Research Articles
-
Sonic Net Can Prevent Bird-Jet Collisions on Airports
-
Deer-Vehicle Collisions Can Be Reduced Using Science, Say University of Georgia Researchers
-
Double Crater Found in Sweden: Unique Meteorite Event?
-
Dino-Killing Asteroid Also Wiped Out Mollusks?
-
Asteroids Likely Rich in Water, Explain for Earth's Oceans
-
Galactic Threesomes Scared Some Systems Into Going Rogue
-
Scientists May Soon Solve Mystery of Dino-Killing Asteroid
-
Mercury Born from Hit-and-Run Collisions
-
Isotopic Signal Reveals Echo of Ancient Earth
-
NASA Video: Neutron Stars' Violent Collision to Form Black Hole
-
Scientists Claim a Violent Collision Knocked the Moon on its Side
-
Asteroid Comes Within Moon's Orbit and Skims Past Earth