A couple got a terrifying surprise on October 9 while driving through the village of Nava Bandar in India's Gujarat. As they rode their motorcycle through the streets at night, the pair came ...
Got to go to the Zoo today and see some behind the scenes amazing things Like feeing [sic] a baby giraffe,” the Sports ...
Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs are on a bye this week. They started the season 5-0 and now have time to relax and ...
On 9 August, the Indian city of Kolkata was shaken when a trainee doctor was found raped and murdered at one of its oldest ...
A new study analyzed hairs embedded in the damaged teeth of two “man-eater” lions that killed at least 28 people in 1898 in the Tsavo region of Kenya.
The lions’ teeth had been damaged during their lifetimes. Study coauthor Thomas Gnoske found thousands of hairs embedded in the exposed cavities of the broken teeth.
The Tsavo “man-eaters” became infamous after killing at least 28 people in 1898 when they terrorized people in Kenya.