Archives
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Parasitic Gall Wasps: Why it Took 4 Years for Scientists to Identify Them
Bloodsucking gall wasps spend the most of their existence from eggs to caterpillars, and pupae to grownups; encased in a bubble necropolis on leaves, blossoms, and branches of oak woods.
Latest Research Articles
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Longest Lightning Bolt Spanning 477 Miles Detected in Three States, Setting Global Record
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Decline in Wales' Otter Population Linked to River Pollution
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Following its Close Friend’s Death, a Sad Elephant Isolated for 15 Years in ‘Bleak Enclosure’
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More Than 120 Venomous Snakes Found in Home of Dead Man in Maryland
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Lost City of Cahokia: Experts Visit Abandoned Civilization Home to 15,000 People in the Past
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Study Shows Glaciers in Northern Hemisphere Continue to Melt at an Alarming Rate
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Poland-Belarus Border: Construction of Wall Risks Europe’s Last Old-Growth Forest
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Lungs of the Deep Ocean: Scientists Measure Oxygen Flow in Labrador Sea
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Low Volcanic Temperature Results in Global Cooling, Giving Way for Dinosaurs to Evolve
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Scientists to Bring Extinct Woolly Mammoths Back to Life by Creating 'Arctic Elephant'
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Temperate Rainforest Can Help in the Fight Against Climate Change
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Carbon Capture Hype Might Hurt the Project in the Long Run