This story is from The Pulse, a weekly health and science podcast. Find it on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. Scientists document the diversity of life by making specimens ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. I've visited the Field Museum for 21 years and finally got to tour one of its hidden collections. Researchers preserve and store ...
In 2019, two Harvard researchers visiting the Natural History Museum of Utah pulled open a drawer of confiscated Cambrian ...
Conservationist and photographer Scott Trageser has developed a 3D scanning system that could potentially reshape how animals are studied in the wild. The system uses an array of cameras that work in ...
On the fourth floor of Noland hall, a fully articulated chimpanzee skeleton and taxidermy wolf block the whiteboard in a discussion room. Cabinets line the walls, and inside researchers can find ...
This Halloween season, learn how the National Museum of Natural History’s dermestid beetle colony transforms decaying animal carcasses into spotless skeletons. Emma Saaty The Smithsonian’s Osteo Prep ...
When museums acquire mammal specimens, they do more than stuff the creatures and arrange them in display cases. Mammalogists also record when and where the animals were found, what climates they ...
When paleontologists picture the earliest animals, they tend to imagine something with at least a rudimentary skeleton: a ...
While much has been written about Yellowstone National Park, few historians have discussed the history of its wildlife, particularly before 1916 when the National Park Service was established.
Scientists document the diversity of life by making specimens of whole animals for natural history collections. But this practice is fading, and it’s a problem for current and future researchers. For ...