Arctic marine life is notoriously difficult to study because of its remoteness. But drones have enabled whales to be monitored and diagnosed while being minimally invasive, according to a new study.
Kyodo News+ on MSN
Feature: Japan's 'government hunters' confront rising bear encounters
NAGANO, Japan - Yusuke Sakurai stopped dead in his tracks when he saw the black bear. It was the winter of his second year as ...
13hon MSNOpinion
Kevin Stefanski: scapegoat? What’s up with Lonzo Ball; why the Guardians didn’t draft an outfielder No. 1: Terry’s Talkin’ podcast
Welcome to the first 2026 edition of the Terry’s Talkin’ podcast, with cleveland.com columnist Terry Pluto and host David ...
Live Science on MSN
60,000-year-old poison arrows from South Africa are the oldest poison weapons ever discovered
Five quartz arrowheads found in a South African cave were laced with a slow-acting tumbleweed poison that would have tired ...
These ‘bubble bullets’ are louder than an underwater gunshot and hotter than lava. The immense heat and pressure also produce ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results