News

The Museum of the Weird is a fun way to spend an hour or so away from the mid-Texas heat. Located in the Lucky Lizard Curios ...
Paleontologist and Geologist Dr. Ken Lacovara joins WIRED to answer the internet's burning questions about fossils. Can we ...
Scientists determined the bones — one of them a cow skeleton — dated back to 1865 and 1870.
'Sharkitecture:' A nanoscale look inside a blacktip shark's skeleton FAU study maps internal structure in unprecedented detail Date: May 20, 2025 Source: Florida Atlantic University Summary: Using ...
Skeletal muscles, which are voluntary and work in pairs, enable movement by contracting and pulling on bones. Smooth muscles operate involuntarily, facilitating processes like digestion and blood ...
The 3D scans of this vaquita skeleton will be hosted on MorphoSource, a publicly accessible data archive. The scans will be available for download and used for education, outreach and research ...
The rare skeleton, loaned from the San Diego Natural History Museum to SeaWorld San Diego in 1966, is believed to be one of, if not the only, full skeleton of a vaquita available in the U.S.
More human anatomy diagrams: front view of muscles, back view of muscles, organs, nervous system Assemble a skeleton in our interactive body.
Skeletal muscle is the type of muscle that controls movement. Problems with these muscles can be minor, life-threatening, or ongoing problems that make it hard to perform basic daily activities.
Now, scientists analysing a fossilised sea cow skeleton, have made a grisly discovery. They believe that the ancient sea cow they were studying died after being attacked by a crocodile and a shark!
An ancient sea cow that once swam the oceans millions of years ago met its demise after being attacked by a crocodile and was feasted upon later by a shark, a study suggests. Skeleton analysis ...
The sea cow, which belongs to the genus Culebratherium, died after the crocodile performed a “death roll” while grasping its prey, a behaviour commonly observed in modern counterparts.