Only time will tell how completely nature recovers from the devastating Eaton and Palisades fires in January 2025. But the ...
What makes winter wandering so fascinating is not necessarily the wildlife you see. Rather it’s the evidence of animals’ presence left behind.
That blend enhances the living room where wingback chairs in a floral velvet complement a moss green rug. Additional chairs ...
Early detection of declining forest health is critical for the timely intervention and treatment of droughted and diseased ...
Scientists mapping the human body at the cellular level keep running into the same surprise: beneath the apparent chaos of ...
Florida homes are embracing bold geometric patterns, blending Art Deco roots, coastal influences, and modern design for ...
New research shows that crops are far more vulnerable when too much rainfall originates from land rather than the ocean. Land-sourced moisture leads to weaker, less reliable rainfall, heightening ...
Mosaics can enchant humans with gestalt beauty, but for many other creatures, their worth transcends aesthetics. Repeating patterns of tilelike motifs adorn insect eyes, shark mouths, sunflower heads ...
"Shrouded in Snow." Special Mention, Animal Portraits. Blanketed by frost in the Mongolian wilderness, a Pallas’s cat endures the aftermath of a snowstorm at -35°C. Perfectly adapted to its frozen ...
We can't protect what we don't understand. From decoding wolf howls to making sense of millions of citizen-science sightings, we explore the tools helping researchers understand the wild in new ways.
Tal Sharf (right, senior author), Tjiste van der Molen (middle, postdoctoral researcher), and Greg Kaurala (left, staff researcher). Humans have long wondered when and how we begin to form thoughts.