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Know if online seller is legit
Thousands of online buyers got scammed everyday and it seems that risk is natural along with a convinient way of buying online promised. More >>
Crickets dig their burrows with the openings towards the Sun but carefully concealed in the grass. More >>
How some sea fish use their poison
There are certain fish which present serious dangers even to man because of their strength and ferocity. The shark is an obvious example, but among the most dangerous are the poisonous fish which use their venom in a number of ways. More >>
How the prehistoric winged lizards flew
Perhaps we shall never know why reptiles should suddenly try to fly at a certain time in the history of the Earth. More >>
A large beehive can contain up to 80,000 bees but there is never any danger that such a vast number of insects will lead to confusion or chaos. More >>
How the bee eater makes its strange nest
The nests of bee-eaters are strange constructions, like those of the fishing martin. The bee-eater uses its long beak to dig out deep tunnels on the steep banks of rivers. More >>
The remora, or shark-sucker, has always excited the wonder and curiosity of seafarers. This fish has a flat, oval disc on top of its head which it uses to fasten itself .firmly to flat surfaces. This habit has earned the remora a certain reputation in legends. More >>
In zoos the popular names of the animals on display are written on a label in front of their cages. More >>
The ocean sunfish was known in ancient times but the first fishermen who caught these animals thought they were mutilated. More >>
How the condor became a symbol of freedom
There is an old tradition among the Indians of Lake Titicaca that dates back to the Spanish conquest of South America. It concerns the fight between a condor and a bull. More >>
It seems impossible that tortoises that move in such a slow, cumbersome manner should have relatives that swim fast through the ocean. Turtles, which very closely resemble tortoises, are sometimes as quick as fish in moving through the water, despite their heavy shell. More >>
How the salmon passes waterfalls
The salmon lives near the coastline in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans in the northern hemisphere. In the month of June it leaves the ocean and swims up the river to the place where it was born. The salmon looks for fresh water with plenty of oxygen in it. More >>
How the earthworm digs its tunnels
Earthworms cannot stand dry conditions in the soil: their bodies must always be in contact with damp earth and even a few minutes’ exposure to the sunlight makes them dry up and die. More >>
How the buffalo defends itself from insect bites and stings
The buffalo likes to make its home in marshy places where it loves to roll in the mud and stay there for hours at a time; More >>
How the gardener bird builds its nest
Little is known about the peculiar habits of the gardener-bird which has a marked liking for colorful objects and for what seems to be gardening. More >>
How the ancestor of the horse developed
The illustrations on this page show the various stages in the evolution of the horse. More >>
During the mating season penguins gather together by the tens of thousands along the coasts of Antarctica. The female penguins lay one or two eggs which they place in a hollow in the ground. More >>
How the praying mantis tricks its victims
The mantis can often be mistaken for a grasshopper but more careful observation will reveal that this creature is very different from that harmless insect. More >>
How animals further the advance of science
To establish how effective a drug is it must be tested carefully and accurately and its effect on a living organism meticulously studied and noted. This is the task of pharmacology, a science which has made tremendous advances in less than a century. More >>
How plankton is formed in the sea
The surface of the seas and oceans is inhabited by hundreds of millions of tiny animals that are almost invisible to the naked eye. More >>
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