She approached chimps as she did people: on their own terms. By Sam Anderson ...
ZME Science on MSN
How Humans Rank on a Monogamy Scale in Nature: Right Between Meerkats and Wild Dogs
The monogamy rate in humans may be higher than you expected... but we do it in a strange way compared to other animals.
At the end of December, we can't help but look back at what ended up getting the most clicks and views these last 12 months.
Indian Defence Review on MSN
It’s Official: Scientists Finally Solved Why Women Live Longer than Men Almost Everywhere on the Planet
Women outlive men in nearly every country—but the reason has nothing to do with diet, stress, or modern life. A ...
A new study finds how monogamous humans are in the mammal family. In a list ranking the monogamy of mammals, humans stood at ...
Nature is astonishingly diverse. Across the planet’s oceans, forests, grasslands, and cities, living beings interact in ways that defy rigid expectations.
THERE have been many exciting developments at Colchester Zoo throughout the year but there have also been some sad losses.
Recently, the Nikon Red ZR camera was unveiled in the country. The unveiling attracted veteran filmmaker, Tunde Kelani, ...
Modern humans have uniquely small and flat faces, especially compared with our Neanderthal cousins' notoriously robust faces and large noses, but the reason for this difference has eluded ...
Live Science on MSN
Science history: Dian Fossey found murdered, after decades protecting gorillas that she loved — Dec. 27, 1985
Dian Fossey was a zoologist who spent decades studying the elusive mountain gorillas of Congo and Rwanda before she was ...
Mongabay News on MSN
Congo’s communities are creating a 1-million-hectare biodiversity corridor
Dominique Bikaba’s family was once displaced from vibrant rainforests in the Congo Basin to make way for a sweeping national ...
IFLScience on MSN
How Monogamous Are Humans Vs. Other Mammals? Somewhere Between Beavers And Meerkats, Apparently
“Almost all other monogamous mammals either live in tight family units of just a breeding pair and their offspring, or in groups where only one female breeds,” he explained. “Whereas humans live in ...
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