IEyeNews

iLocal News Archives

iScience

iLocal News iScience iWorld News News

Study Reveals That Every Dolphin Has A Unique Whistled Name

By Tia Ghose, Livescience, From Business Science Dolphins call to each other using distinctive whistles that serve as names, new research suggests. Each dolphin makes its own unique whistle, and close friends or family will reply with the same sound….

iEnvironment iLocal News iScience iWorld News News

Beavers, the unsung warriors in the fight against climate change

by Kristina Chew From Care2 The number of beavers in North America fell sharply throughout the 20th century, from an estimated 60 to 10 million to 6 to 12 million. The U.S. park service is now seeking to reintroduce them…

iBusiness iEntertainment iEnvironment iLocal News iScience iWorld News News

Blackfish: the movie SeaWorld doesn’t want you to see

by Alicia Graef from Care2 Blackfish, a new documentary that chronicles the life of SeaWorld’s infamous orca Tilikum and the effects of keeping these apex predators in captivity, is getting rave reviews and making waves. Even so, SeaWorld continues to…

iLocal News iScience iWorld News News

First color detected for planet outside our system

Courtesy of NASA and World Science staff As­tro­no­mers us­ing NASA’s Hub­ble Space Tel­e­scope say they have fig­ured out the col­or of a plan­et out­side our so­lar sys­tem for the first time. It’s co­balt blue, though not at all Earth-like, they…

iLocal News iScience iWorld News News

A 23-million-year old lizard fossil was found preserved in amber

Dina Spector From Business Insider A 23-million-year-old lizard was found preserved in amber in Chiapas, Mexico, Spanish international news agency EFE reports. Amber, or fossilized tree resin, can contain plants and insects that are tens of millions of years old,…

iEnvironment iLocal News iScience iWorld News News

Caribbean lizards suggest evolution more predictable than thought

By Douglas Main, Staff Writer   From Live Science If you could rewind time and watch evolution take place all over again, would it happen the same way as it did before? This question has long puzzled thinkers like legendary evolutionary…

iEntertainment iLocal News iScience iWorld News News

Physicists of the Caribbean

This hilarious story from the pen of Rhys Taylor crossed my desk and I hope you find it just as funny. Also visit his other site, too (see below). The exiled life of an astrophysicist Follow the adventures in the…

iEnvironment iLocal News iScience iWorld News News

U.S. researchers explore deep Caribbean reefs

From Fosters Daily Democratic SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Scientists with the Smithsonian Institution have discovered at least one new fish species at a deep reef off Curacao while conducting a yearlong project to gather data on temperature and biodiversity…

iEnvironment iLocal News iScience iWorld News

Gone, But Not Forgotten: Species We’ve Lost in the Last 10 Years

By Abigail Geer, Care2 Mankind has the honor of quite possibly being the most destructive force to ever hit Mother Nature. With 150 to 200 species of life ceasing to exist every 24 hours, a mass extinction is looming, and…

iCommunity iEnvironment iHealth iLocal News iScience iWorld News News

Are You a Mosquito Magnet? Blame Your Blood

Megan, selected from Mother Nature Network, Posted on Care2 If you’ve ever suspected that you are irresistibly attractive to mosquitoes, you might not just be paranoid. Mosquitoes are drawn to all kinds of physical particularities, from smelly feet— which they…