Julian Carolan says researchers are looking at polar bear grease because it repels ice. That property could help replace the harmful forever chemicals currently used in non-stick cookware.
A polar bear cub was captured playfully snuggling its mom in Canada, heartwarming video shows.
It’s not the white fluffy look-alike our kids snuggle or the cartoon image drinking Coca-Cola or “fat loungers who draw crowds at zoos” or animated replicas who speak to our children with the press of ...
Tourism operators on P.E.I. are hoping a new animated series about Anne will re-ignite interest in visiting the Island.
New research finds that grease that coats polar bear fur contains a specialized mixture of chemicals that make it resistant ...
Could art help people learn about climate change issues and all the creatures impacted by it? This is the bet made by a ...
Koupen-chan & You Words of Encouragement from Japan's Positive Penguin By Rututea Everyone needs a little help to get through the d ...
Researchers from the University of Toronto have established a direct link between the population decline in polar bears living in Western Hudson Bay and shrinking sea ice caused by climate change. The ...
The de-icing properties of polar bear sebum could fuel new innovations, scientists say, potentially unlocking alternatives to harmful “forever chemicals” used in ice-resistant coatings today ...
After researching, scientists found that a polar bear's hair is coated in a natural grease containing cholesterol and fatty acids, which repels ice and snow from sticking to them. Inside Edition ...
For a while there, it seemed like a crudely drawn webcomic had DreamWorks Animation’s number. In an unflattering contrast to the imaginative movies that Pixar was making in the ‘00s ...