An enchanting video is winning hearts on social media, showing a young shepherd guiding her flock with impressive confidence.
Moo Deng, a pudgy, pink-cheeked pygmy hippo, quickly became a social media star about two months after being born at Khao ...
This year, George has been caught on camera having a bad “hare” day with a rabbit on his head, riding a dog like he’s on a ...
Reddish Vale Farm's Halloween Festival is a brilliant day out for families with pumpkin picking, magic shows, potion making ...
The world’s tiniest fish is the Dwarf Pygmy Goby – but size isn’t everything, this fish is still an impressive predator. If you have a fascination for the world beneath the sea, you know just about ...
Enteucha acetosae, the midget moth, has a wingspan of 1 inch, while the average wingspan of a moth is 9 inches. The scarlet dwarf dragonfly is an incredibly small species of the Odanata family. This ...
In 1995, Caltech researchers at the Institute's Palomar Observatory first observed what appeared to be a brown dwarf orbiting Gliese 229 – a red dwarf star located about 19 light-years from Earth.
So, we need to let our dogs get their hose time in while they still can. One Miniature Australian Shepherd is wasting absolutely no time in that department. When his mom turned on the hose recently, ...
Simulations of the evolution and distribution of elements inside galaxies suggest that the most likely birthplace of these stars would have been a small dwarf galaxy, weighing no more than roughly ...
Astronomers announced Wednesday that a decades-long mystery surrounding the first known brown dwarf — a “failed star” called Gliese 229B — has finally been solved. Gliese 229B confused ...
If some city councillors can get the necessary support from their colleagues, Ottawans may, one of these days, welcome a whole new breed of gardeners to town: goats. That’s right: goats.
Scientists have puzzled over the object known as Gliese 229B, the first known brown dwarf discovered 30 years ago. Brown dwarfs are sometimes called failed stars because they're lighter than stars ...