Owls and other talon-ted species at the White Mountain Nature Center remind audiences of the importance of recycling and ...
The pristine green expanse in front of your home no longer resembles the smooth pasture you worked so hard to cultivate.
Crows are highly intelligent. They can recognize faces, hold grudges, and even recognize cars. Crows cache food, and will move it if another creature sees them hiding it. They use tools, and fashion ...
Crows, ravens, and magpies exhibit many fascinating behaviors. For instance, when a fellow bird dies, you can see them ...
Toddlers might be cute, but their decision-making skills aren’t exactly top-tier. By age two or three, most can say a few ...
Looking to see artists like Justin Bieber, Lorde or Ludacris at a music festival this year? PEOPLE has all the information ...
Because animals have a limited capability of understanding human language, they cannot “read” the way humans do. How do ...
In 1998, paleoanthropologist Ronald Clarke and his research team discovered the skull of a previously unknown human ancestor ...
Humans are far more monogamous than our primate cousins, but less so than beavers, a new study suggests. Researchers from the University of Cambridge in England analyzed the proportion of full ...
Fresh findings about arm and leg bones advance the debate over whether Sahelanthropus tchadensis was bipedal, but not ...
Something about a warm, flickering campfire draws in modern humans. Where did that uniquely human impulse come from? How did our ancestors learn to make fire? How long have they been making it?
Human biology evolved for a world of movement, nature, and short bursts of stress—not the constant pressure of modern life. Industrial environments overstimulate our stress systems and erode both ...