A diabolical gamemaker scatters 85 flags across the Pisa Range. He assigns each flag a certain number of points. Some are ...
In the battle against this country’s rivers of poo, the dung beetle is a potentially powerful weapon and Shaun Forgie is a ...
Put a drone up and any self-respecting black-backed gull in the vicinity will be there within moments, pecking and hollering ...
In 1938, a young chemist working on developing new refrigerants accidentally created waxy white flakes instead of gas. The ...
A dead fish is a dead fish.” That’s the key finding of a recent study on the scavenging habits of our native crayfish, led by ...
Usually, Panther lives in Doubtless Bay in the Far North, her artworks twists on traditional European lace patterns, made ...
Each swim is shadowed by the amphibious boat and RIB; kayaks and swimmers pop out to say hello sometimes, too. “We’ll be ...
Up to six trillion climate change-fighting microbes inhabit each square metre of tree bark, according to a new study by ...
While editing Sarah Newey and Simon Townsley’s feature story about the surge of methamphetamine and HIV in Fiji (page 50), I ...
Timelapse photography shows the tiny superstars of the world’s most famous glow-worm cave system, Waitomo, flickering in ...
In our cover story last issue, we outlined the many threats facing our fur seal colonies. While most populations are stable or growing—for now—a new paper shows that all along the West Coast, birth ...
Oxygen shaped the world as we know it. It’s why we hiccup and why frogs croak. It’s so good that some turtles have learned to suck it in using not just their nose and mouth, but also… another orifice.
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