Fort Worth City Council member Jeanette Martinez speaks during the ribbon-cutting ceremony for the Child Care Studio at ...
Slithering beneath the vast dunes of the Gobi Desert, legend has it, is the monstrous Mongolian Death Worm. It kills prey by squirting lethal venom and can even electrocute from a distance. So goes ...
These three specimens of M. sestertia in the collections of the National Museum of Natural History (dorsal, top, and ventral views shown here) were collected in 1936.
Tom Emerson looks kind of like David Pocock with a beard. The new “Independents for Canberra” MLA for the ACT’s Kurrajong division also happens to be a former advisor to the independent senator.
Chicago’s favorite annual Halloween-themed extravaganza is back, the over-the-top haunted experience of Nightmare on Clark Street at Bamboo Club. From a bevy of horrifying creatures to an ...
Are you ready for the “ribbon worm”? That white “goo” is actually the worm’s nose, they use it to penetrate their prey and then inject venom into them. They’re mostly deep in the ocean ...
Mole crabs live in perpetual motion. Unlike a barnacle, say, that clings to solid rock, a mole crab moves—fast—to stay within the ribbon of beach washed by waves. This mobile part of a sandy shore has ...
Since the killing of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar during an Israeli military operation, X has been flooded with claims that UNRWA has added a black ribbon to its logo as a sign of mourning.
Caenorhabditis elegans, one millimeter long, has just 959 cells. The worm’s simplicity has made it a mainstay of scientific research.Credit... Supported by By Teddy Rosenbluth When scientists ...
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