News

The sinking of the U.S.S. Indianapolis is widely known as a shark story—but the truth is much more horrifying.
A recent discovery by the National Park Service in the Kentucky Mammoth Cave National Park led the world one step closer to ...
An international research team led by scientists from the University of Vienna has uncovered new insights into how ...
A tiny shark named Yoko is making waves — not just at the Shreveport Aquarium, where she was born, but in the scientific ...
National Geographic Wild’s gill-ty pleasure, SharkFest, returns for its wildest season yet this July! With over 25 hours of ...
Sharkfest features “Sharks Up Close with Bertie Gregory” Who Ventured to South Africa To Film Great White Sharks Without a ...
Arnaldo Pomodoro, one of Italy’s most prominent contemporary artists, has died at age 98. Pomodoro’s massive bronze spheres ...
Bunda yang sedang hamil, wajib tahu beberapa tanda ibu dan janin sehat. Ini dia berbaagi kandungan yang wajib dikonsumsi dan kadarnya.
The Brief At least 1,660 "unprovoked" shark attacks have been reported in the U.S. since the 1800s. Florida leads the nation in the number of attacks, with far more than any other state.
Our morbid fascination with white sharks’ ability to kill us drove the success of “Jaws” and, eventually, decades of “Shark Week,” Discovery’s annual TV marathon that always features ...
How sharks went from ‘garbage eaters’ to ‘man-eaters’ In the decades before “Jaws,” white sharks weren’t considered to be among the ocean’s most fearsome predators.
When “Jaws” premiered to an invigorated public in June 1975, most of the research on sharks focused on preventing shark attacks, Skomal said. “We knew it was big, it could swim fast and we ...