Amber Fossils Show That Ticks Pestered Dinosaurs Just Like They Pester Dogs Now A team of researchers were able to find a new species of prehistoric ticks preserved in chunks of amber fossils. These ticks, they presume, were highly likely sucking the blood off dinosaurs 99 million years ago. by Carl Velasco
Science Heartbreaking Video Shows Starving Polar Bear Looking For Food In Ice-less Land by Athena Chan
Science 'Freeze-Flee' Response: Narwhals' Confused Response Could Cost Them Their Lives by Athena Chan
Science Not All Rats Are Created Equal: Why Uptown Manhattan Rats Are Different From Downtown by Carl Velasco
Science Hundreds Of Pterosaur Eggs Found In China: What Do These Reveal About Prehistoric Flying Reptiles? by Allan Adamson
Science Finches In Galapagos Island Evolved In Just Two Generations: Here Are Other Animals That Are Rapidly Evolving by Allan Adamson
Science 'Big Bird': Galapagos Study Shows New Bird Species Developed In Just Two Generations by Athena Chan
Science Why Do Bowhead Whales Keep Returning To Cumberland Sound, Nunavut? To Exfoliate, Of Course by Vincent Lanaria
Science Rapid Extinction Of Passenger Pigeon May Be Due to Lack Of Genetic Diversity by Catherine Isabedra
Science Chronic Wasting Disease Threatens Deer Population: What You Should Know by Samriddhi Dastidar
Science This Fungal Parasite Turns Ants Into Zombies: Here Are Other Mind-Controlling Parasites by Athena Chan
Science Baby Monkey Crashes From Caffeine Overload After Stealing Tourist's Coffee by Catherine Isabedra
Science Here's What Could Have Happened If Dinosaur-Killing Asteroid Hit Earth Somewhere Else by Samriddhi Dastidar
Science New Orangutan Species Faces Potential Extinction: Here's How Humans Can Save It by Samriddhi Dastidar
Science Kleptopredation: Sea Slugs Use Opportunistic Strategy Of Catching Prey In The Deep Sea by Allan Adamson
Science Amelia Earhart Mystery: Giant Coconut Crabs May Have Carted Off Remains Of Lost Pilot by Allan Adamson