Meet Goliath, a Massive Tadpole as Long as Your Face0
- Earth Mysteries, From Around the Web
- December 7, 2018
An enormous tadpole recently found in the wild is bigger than a can of Coke — and it’s still growing.
An enormous tadpole recently found in the wild is bigger than a can of Coke — and it’s still growing.
Slow-motion collisions of tectonic plates under the ocean drag about three times more water down into the deep Earth than previously estimated, according to a first-of-its-kind seismic study that spans the Mariana Trench.
A previously unexplored cave in British Columbia has been described as having ‘national significance’.
A staggering steer in Australia has the internet – and the colossal cattle’s owner – saying, “Holy cow.”
Vacations come in many shapes and forms. Among the more unusual is the growing trend for cryptotourism, which the International Cryptozoology Museum estimates generates $140million annually in the US alone.
From monstrous turtles to ancient trolls, creepy creatures call Hoosier State home
Is the Ayia Napa sea monster of Cape Greco, Cyprus anything more than a tourist attraction? Let’s look at the lack of evidence and find out!
what is cryptid-tourism?
Earlier this month, NASA published a strange and entrancing photo of a ridiculously square iceberg. And NASA scientist Kelly Brunt speculated to Live Science that the berg was likely pretty fresh, its sharp corners the result of recently snapping off of an ice shelf and not having yet been battered much by the elements.
Australian researchers have developed new technology enabling them for the first time to film a deep-sea swimming sea cucumber, also known as a “headless chicken monster,” in Southern Ocean waters off East Antarctica.