By the time a human brain registers danger, a viper’s strike is already over. Here’s how these snakes can move faster than ...
Sir Keir wriggled, stopped, started and blushed in the face of all these questions. Behind him a group of very sad vultures took up their perches: Rayner, Streeting, that angry man they inexplicably ...
"It's every conservationist's dream to help save a whole species – and that's exactly what we've done," said Tamas Papp of ...
The Living Shorelines Project is a collaboration between OC Coastkeeper, Cal State Fullerton, Cal State Long Beach and local ...
About 445 million years ago, Earth’s oceans turned into a danger zone. Glaciers spread across the supercontinent Gondwana, and shallow seas shrank fast.
It’s no surprise to anybody who is paying attention that the complex system that governed the relationship of men and women ...
Large blooms of seaweed are increasingly being reported along coastlines globally, from Europe and Asia to the tropics and ...
How did the complexity of many organisms living today evolve from the simpler body plans of their ancestors? This is a central question in biology. Take our hands, for example: Every time we type a ...
The brain’s hemispheres are specialized for efficiency. Modern neuroscience shows lateralization enhances function without ...
A new study from the University of Nevada found that Mercury from 19th Century mining is still affecting waters in the Carson ...
Study Finds on MSN
The Dyslexia Paradox: Ancient Genes and Modern Reading Struggles
In A Nutshell Ancient origins: Genes linked to dyslexia date back over 430 million years to early vertebrates: they’re not recent evolutionary innovations Recycled brain circuits: Humans don’t have ...
You don't have to be a genius: anemones have been using human genes to form their bodies for 600 million years.
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