Photos in the News
A pregnant tiger leaped from a boat, flames seared a U.S. embassy and shot from a missile-launching cruiser, the moon turned red, and more.
February 22, 2008
Scores of invasive rats on islands are hunting many seabird species into oblivion, a new study says.
February 21, 2008
A type of hormone signals the Asian swallowtail caterpillar to mimic black-and-white bird droppings and later a green leaf, scientists have found.
February 21, 2008
Deep in Antarctica's murky waters, scientists have found new, bizarre creatures that grow to abnormally large sizes.
February 20, 2008
Six new denizens of the deep—from crustacean-crushers to pale and fleshy-lipped eelpouts—were found recently in oceans off Antarctica.
February 19, 2008
A new monkey debuted in a London "rain forest," a beagle bounded to glory in New York, Japanese children huddled in igloos, and more.
February 15, 2008
Two new species of two-legged carnivores were recently unveiled: one that hunted like a shark and another that may have eaten like a hyena, researchers say.
February 13, 2008
The distant galaxy, called A1689-zD1, is photographed forming about 13 billion years ago, not long after the formation of the first galaxies.
February 13, 2008
In a first, lowland gorillas have been seen mating face-to-face. And it's not the first time the female, nicknamed Princess Leah, has made history.
February 12, 2008
See the dig and the artifacts that are rewriting the story of Stone Age Egypt.
February 12, 2008
The sparrow-size reptile that glided through forests 120 million years ago may have been an ancestor of larger pterosaurs, experts say.
February 11, 2008
South Korean Police arrested a man suspected of setting fire to the 610-year-old Namdaemun gate, the country's top cultural treasure.
February 11, 2008
Check out a selection of 2007's most compelling news pictures, recently announced by World Press Photo.
February 8, 2008
See the solar system's tallest mountain in blazing color, a "distressing" whaling photo, a potential heir to the Concorde, and more.
February 8, 2008
A hundred years older than the first known European oil paintings, the newfound Afghan artworks were discovered where the Taliban destroyed giant Buddhas.
February 6, 2008
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