In the dead of night, a car rolled to a stop on an Australian highway in front of Christa Beckmann, a bespectacled woman who ...
Triceratops rerouted its nerves and blood vessels through its nose, turning its massive nasal cavity into a system for ...
Triceratops’ massive head may have been doing more than just showing off those famous horns. Using CT scans and 3D reconstructions of fossil skulls, researchers uncovered a surprisingly complex nasal ...
Triceratops and other horned dinosaurs had exceptionally large nasal cavities compared to most animals. To better understand what filled that space ...
Researchers have uncovered 300-million-year-old reptile skin impressions in Germany, the oldest direct evidence of reptile ...
Brain freeze — the sharp, seconds-long headache we get from ingesting something cold — is rooted in the way our brain senses ...
In response to social cues, individual clownfish will switch sexes. Cutting-edge research reveals the neural and genetic ...
Mr. Pickles, a boxer, received VetStem Cell Therapy in conjunction with surgery for torn cruciate ligaments. This ...
Dobby the four-eared kitten is taking the internet by storm. But how can a cat grow extra ears? Scientists explain the rare ...
A new study finds some flat-faced dog breeds face serious breathing risks, expanding concern beyond the most well-known short-muzzled dogs.
Alnashetri cerropoliciensis’ belongs to a strange carnivorous lineage that refutes the idea of the progressive miniaturization of its group ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Wild animal defenses so bizarre they sound ripped from sci-fi movies
Across deserts, ocean floors, and forest undergrowth, a handful of animals have evolved defenses so extreme they strain belief. Bombardier beetles detonate chemical explosions inside their own bodies.
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