Ancient deep-sea organisms suggest movement, sexual reproduction, and complex animal life began earlier than previously thought.
Deep oceans contain microbes with yet-to-be-discovered properties that could drive future innovations in biotechnology.
Picture a mouse taking rapid, staccato sniffs of a crumb it's found while foraging for food. Now compare that with a human leaning in for a single, deep inhale to gauge whether a cantaloupe is ripe.
Exceptionally preserved fossils from China reveal that bryozoans were already thriving during the Cambrian explosion.
Evolution is always happening — so why can't we see it? A biologist explains the timescale problem, election pressure, and ...
Why humans have a philtrum, the groove above your lip, explained by an evolutionary biologist — from embryonic face-building ...
Abstract: Filters and wrappers represent two mainstream approaches to feature selection (FS). Although evolutionary wrapper-based FS outperforms filters in addressing real-world classification ...
Fossils unearthed in Ethiopia are reshaping our view of human evolution. Instead of a straight march from ape-like ancestors to modern humans, researchers now see a tangled, branching tree with ...