Scientists have just isolated a genetic variation that explains why Turkey Pointers have such unique noses.
The Mount Augustus snail was nearly driven to extinction 20 years ago.
On Monday morning, a woman called 911 after witnessing a bear attack and kill her father's dog—when authorities arrived, they also found the man's body.
Brood XIV will emerge this summer to overwhelm predators, shake up ecosystems, and terrify everyone with eardrums.
Top health officials were there to tell Trump how smart he was.
A cute observation in the cephalopods' behavior indicates they also react to sound waves, a notion that will soon be tested with a machine learning approach.
A new study challenges a widely-held and widely-taught notion about mitosis.
Three decades ago, scientists began to find razor-sharp teeth from predators that had no business being there.
PIC's gene-edited pigs are highly resistant to one of the most harmful viruses affecting pig populations worldwide today.
A startup claims it can grow luxury leather using Tyrannosaur DNA, but scientists aren’t so sure.
The world’s tiniest animal somehow got more hardcore.
The paleontological treasure sat in a fossil collection in Brazil, unnoticed.
The carnivorous "bone collector" caterpillar is the only known species of its kind, researchers say, and its ancient lineage may soon die out.
Scientists argue that blanking out is its own state of consciousness, distinct from having your mind wander off.
The tiny hitchhikers might be yucky, but they’re also a sign of a thriving deep-sea ecosystem.
Six of the seven sea turtle species are threatened or endangered but that could soon change for the better.
More than half of the world's scientifically useful T. rexes are in the hands of private or commercial owners, and not accessible to scientists, according to research.
By stimulating thousands of individual cone cells, researchers made volunteers see a blue-green color of "unprecedented saturation."
Two squid species never before filmed alive just made their deep-sea debut—one after a century-long wait.
The footprint was likely left behind by a 19-foot-long spiky dinosaur with a sledgehammer-like tail club.