Por: New York Post Life July 23, 2023
Please romaine calm. has enticed over 247 million views on TikTok, as young women share what they pulled together to consume while watching their favorite show on the couch. Critics are sounding the alarm on the claiming that the videos showcase too-small portions of food, even though “girl dinners” are often an aesthetic arrangement of cheeses, cold cuts, crackers and fruits (i.e. “snack plates”) or a random assortment of leftovers from... + full article
Newsweek USA Tech May 05, 2023
Humans and primates aren't the only animals to use tools to catch dinner. A bizarre species of bug takes resin from plants, which serves as a kind of glue trap for prey, researchers have discovered.The assassin bug, native to Australia, uses sticky resin from spinifex grass... + más
Scientists find new reason for why bears rub up against trees | Newsweek
Pollen extracted from flower encased in amber 40 million years ago | Newsweek
The New York Times USA Science April 22, 2023
Pitcher plants supplement their diets with this one strange trick: . Usually found growing in relatively poor soil, the plants sprout pitcher-shaped cups with pretty, frilly tops that obscure their true purpose: trapping hapless insects. Look inside the pitchers and you’ll... + más
Chasing Plants: Journeys With A Botanist Through Rainforests, Swamps, And Mountains By Chris Thorogood — Review | Forbes
Carnivorous oyster mushrooms can kill roundworms with “nerve gas in a lollipop” | Ars Technica
Newsweek USA Tech February 24, 2023
The star-nosed mole has one of the weirdest snouts in the animal kingdom. Now researchers are uncovering fascinating new insights into this unusual body part.The star-nosed mole (Condylura cristata) is a highly specialized semi-aquatic mammal found across a vast swathe of... + más
Grounded: How to Get Gold Cards | Newsweek
Mystery of creepy mummified monkey mermaid solved after CT scan | Newsweek
Newsweek USA Tech February 23, 2023
Researchers have shared the first ever footage of a false widow spider preying on a shrew, and it is even more disturbing than you think.The footage was taken by Dawn Sturgess in August 2022 at a house in Chichester in the south of England. In a paper, published in the journal... + más
First peek at Scarlet Spider in 'Across the Spider-Verse’ poster has fans nostalgic | Los Angeles Times
Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse trailer wows with 6 distinct animation styles | Ars Technica
There are some weird and wacky creatures out in the animal kingdom, from immortal jellyfish to mites that live on our eyelashes. However, there is no species so stern-looking and intimidating as the shoebill.These strange birds have captured the imagination of the internet due... + más
Did Martha Washington really name a cat after Alexander Hamilton? | The Boston Globe
'Frustration' fuels Broncos' sideline blowup in loss | ESPN
Ars Technica USA Science November 02, 2022
Navigate Filter by topic Settings Front page layout Site theme Comment activity Sign up or login to join the discussions! Sign up to comment and more - Nov 1, 2022 10:22 pm UTC / Mosquito larvae under a microscope. Certain predatory species feed on the larvae of their rival... + más
Maggots key to crisis-time fertilizer for Ugandan farmers | ABC News
Maggots key to crisis-time fertilizer for Ugandan farmers | Associated Press
The New York Times USA Science September 24, 2022
In its small glass aquarium, an octopus is coiled placidly in its den.Then, a crab falls into the tank.The octopus scrambles to fling itself over the crab, looking less like a finely honed killing machine than a toddler who’s spotted a cookie, engulfing its clawed prey in a... + más
Moose hunt in northern Maine begins Monday | Portland Press Herald
Former Woonsocket mayor found dead in her home, officials confirm | The Boston Globe
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