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Maine mom sparks huge debate after bringing her baby on a moose hunt

The morning started the way autumn mornings do in northern Maine. Cold air. Quiet spruce. First light spreading over a landscape shaped by hard winters and moose trails older than memory. For one family, it was also the start of something they’d done for decades: a permitted bull moose hunt. Autumn Clark grew up this
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Why white dog poop used to be everywhere

If you grew up in the 70s or 80s, you probably remember the chalky white dog poop that dotted sidewalks and lawns. It wasn’t a trick of memory. It was diet, sunlight, and the way pet food was made at the time. The calcium connection Decades ago, many commercial dog foods leaned on meat and
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10 Most Shocking Matador Gores In Spain And The Brutal Reality Of Bullfighting

Serafín Marín’s recent injury at Madrid’s Las Ventas bullring has sparked yet another round of debate over Spain’s most controversial tradition. The 42-year-old veteran matador was gored through the thigh by a bull named Estudiante, lifted into the air, and carried off with a deep wound after coming back to the ring following a six-year
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Jane Goodall, scientist who redefined humanity’s place in nature, dies at 91

Jane Goodall, who died on October 1, 2025 at the age of 91, changed how humanity understands animals, and in doing so, how we understand ourselves. Her life’s work revealed that chimpanzees are not simply creatures of instinct, but beings with emotions, intelligence, and social bonds that echo our own. From her earliest days in
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National parks caught in the crossfire of the shutdown

As the 2025 government shutdown stretches into its first week, America’s national parks sit in uneasy limbo. The Department of the Interior announced that most parks would remain open, but with only a fraction of the usual staff. Roughly 9,300 of the National Park Service’s 14,500 employees have been furloughed, leaving just a third of
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7 Hairy Frogfish types that show nature’s wildest camouflage in action

The hairy frogfish is easily one of the ocean’s oddest masters of disguise. With its scruffy filaments, squat body, and knack for vanishing into coral, algae, or even rubble, it’s proof that evolution sometimes gets downright creative. Let’s look at seven types of hairy frogfish, each with its own wild way of hiding in plain
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Why this “popcorn-scented” animal is vital to rainforest ecosystems

High in the canopy of Southeast Asia’s rainforests lives a creature that smells like movie night. The binturong, also called the bearcat, releases an aroma of buttered popcorn thanks to a unique chemical compound in its urine. It’s an odd detail that grabs attention, but behind the quirk is a story about survival, ecology, and
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First-ever footage shows leopard shark ‘three-way’ in New Caledonia

In the turquoise waters off New Caledonia, scientists recently recorded a moment never before seen: two male leopard sharks mating in succession with a single female. The rare sequence, captured on film, marks the first documented case of this endangered species reproducing in the wild. Dr. Hugo Lassauce of the University of the Sunshine Coast
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Human-sized bat? The truth about the golden-crowned flying fox

When a photo of a bat hanging from a wire in the Philippines went viral a few years ago, the internet erupted in disbelief. Was this creature real? It looked almost human in size, a cloaked figure with leathery wings and a fox-like face. The truth is stranger, and in some ways, more fascinating: the