Morning Overview on MSN
10 reasons humans still aren’t on Mars
Elon Musk has repeatedly said he plans to put humans on Mars, yet the gap between that vision and reality remains wide. The ...
Honey badgers are not actually named for their love of honey, in fact, they raid bee hives to loot the delicious, protein-rich larva inside, which seems like an overly complicated way to get protein.
Bored Panda on MSN
Photographer captures amusing pics of stunning mantises, and here are 30 of the best ones
Wildlife photographer Pang Way shoots a lot from up close. Mostly, little critters that don't normally catch our attention ...
Research conducted by British scientists on zebrafish could lead to significant changes in current artificial insemination techniques used in humans. These researchers were able to ...
Welcome to the Oddporium in Edgemoor, Delaware – a treasure trove where the bizarre, the macabre, and the wonderfully weird come together in a celebration of all things peculiar. In a world of ...
From mudstones on Mars to strange gases in exoplanet atmospheres, tentative evidence for extraterrestrial life is starting to ...
Human biology evolved for a world of movement, nature, and short bursts of stress—not the constant pressure of modern life. Industrial environments overstimulate our stress systems and erode both ...
Humans are far more monogamous than our primate cousins, but less so than beavers, a new study suggests. Researchers from the University of Cambridge in England analyzed the proportion of full ...
Many people today simply assume that our evolution has quietly ended with the development of the modern human. It's easy to think that medicine, science, and modern living have made us "perfect" or ...
14don MSN
I Did Not See Ella McCay Having A Cool Alien: Romulus Connection Coming, But I Love This Sweet Story
In Romulus, Spike Fearn played the role of Bjorn, who is the cousin of the characters of Tyler and Kay – played by Archie ...
Debate has long surrounded when humans first traveled into Sahul, the ancient landmass that is now Australia, New Guinea and Tasmania. Now, a study published in Science Advances, lends credence to the ...
We are indeed still evolving, though it can be hard to tell because it happens over generations and often involves things you can't see, such as what foods different people are able to digest. When ...
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