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Uncover the jaw-dropping fossils in Egypt's Whale Valley that reveal how ancient whales once roamed the land before ...
In a video by the Ocean Exploration Trust, scientists return to a whale fall off the coast of British Columbia for the third time in a decade to glimpse the life still clinging to a whale’s ...
Pepe Coin (PEPE) has seen elevated volatility this week, dropping roughly 10% over the past seven days and trading around ...
Wildfires rage across Europe: smoke rises over Narbonne, France; helicopters fight flames in Izmir and Hatay, Turkey, forcing ...
If you own a legendary kerosene lamp, your lamp takes its place in an evolution of lighting technology that led to today’s LEDs. I find the sooty old kerosene lamp to be more romantic than LED lamps.
Other animals including some early humans, non-human primates, sea otters, elephants, and bird species are known to use ...
After a nearly 130-year scientific slumber, the study, titled "Awakening Patagonia's sleeping sperm whale: A new description of the Early Miocene Idiorophus patagonicus (Odontoceti, Physeteroidea ...
Others, such as sperm whales, have neither cone and, thus, fully monochromatic vision. Scientists know they are only just beginning to plumb the genetic depths of cetacean evolution.
Baleen whales are the titans of the ocean, the largest animals to have ever lived. The record holder is the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus), which can reach lengths of up to 30 metres.
New research from the Museums Victoria Research Institute has turned upside down our previous understanding of the evolution of the largest animals ever––baleen whales.