On a remote island with no food and no options left, I make a decision I never thought I’d face: eating giant bats for survival. From catching them to preparing them over a small beach fire, every ...
Fox News lit its 50 foot Christmas tree in NYC on Friday as contributor Riley Gaines joked she was happy to visit before it went full commie under Mamdani I toured the White House to see Melania Trump ...
James is a published author with multiple pop-history and science books to his name. He specializes in history, space, strange science, and anything out of the ordinary.View full profile James is a ...
Back to the '80s! Michael J. Foxreunited with his former co-star and legendary rocker Joan Jett during his latest red carpet appearance. On Saturday, Nov. 15, the Back to the Future alum hit the red ...
After decades of mystery, scientists have finally proven that Europe’s largest bat, the greater noctule, hunts and eats small songbirds mid-air—more than a kilometer above ground. Using tiny ...
A video seemingly generated by artificial intelligence that depicts the giant Louisville Slugger bat that stands outside the Louisville Slugger Museum & Factory falling and smashing a car on the ...
Rats have gotten a bad reputation over the years for being dirty, garbage-eating carriers of disease. But these ubiquitous rodents are also clever and capable of learning complex tasks, even using ...
Local bat populations are getting attention in the Phoenix area due to a recent mosquito surge ahead of Halloween. The Mexican free-tailed bats living in the Phoenix Bat Cave primarily eat larger prey ...
A wildlife ecologist in South Australia’s Gawler Ranges National Park recently documented a rare encounter with a massive carpet python that slithered across the open landscape. Tali Moyle’s sighting ...
There are three species of bats that eat birds. We know that because we have found feathers and other avian remains in their feces. What we didn’t know was how exactly they hunt birds, which are quite ...
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) -- Thirty years ago, the iconic Louisville Slugger bat was installed. Towering 120 feet tall and weighing 68,000 pounds, the big bat still leans proudly against the museum’s ...