Our planet is filled with fascinating things. Some of these things have already been explored and never fail to amaze us, while some are yet to be discovered. So, if you are someone who likes to ...
Beaches along the shore of England's south coast got a surprise over the weekend when thousands of marine animals, most notedly starfish, washed ashore and left the sand littered with their bodies.
For the Lyme Bay Marine Protected Area research Emma Sheehan receives funding from DEFRA, Natural England, European Maritime and Fisheries Fund, INTERREG France (Channel) England European Regional ...
Scientists have finally solved the mystery behind the devastating starfish wasting disease that has killed over 5 billion starfish across the Pacific Ocean since 2013. The culprit behind this massive ...
A time-lapse video showing the hypnotic flow of water swirling around a minuscule starfish larva earned first place in the 2016 Nikon Small World in Motion Photomicrography Competition. Captured ...
Every year science and art collide in the Nikon Small World in Motion Photomicrography Competition in which brief videos shot through a microscope battle it out to see which will rise to the top. This ...
You may never have paused to think about how a sea star moves about on the seafloor, or even on the beach, for that matter. But sea stars, commonly called starfish, have hundreds of tiny feet on the ...
The video accumulated a whopping 8.6 million views and over 158,000 likes. Our planet never ceases to amaze us. It is filled with some fascinating things that have already been explored, and some that ...
Brian Resnick was Vox’s science and health editor and is the co-creator of Unexplainable, Vox’s podcast about unanswered questions in science. And it all starts off with observations of the small and ...
How cool are starfish? They have no brain, they can regenerate, and when you flip them upside down they're like, "Screw this, I'm flippin' myself back over!" But turns out they also really, really ...
(Nanowerk News) Researchers at ETH Zurich have developed a tiny robot that mimics the movement of a starfish larva. It is driven by sound waves and equipped with tiny hairs that direct the fluid ...
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