Two minutes of octopuses bursting into the world. @schmidtocean.bsky.social has the 4k version on their socials. Dive 622 #octoodyssey #MarineLife
Two minutes of octopuses bursting into the world. @schmidtocean.bsky.social has the 4k version on their socials. Dive 622 #octoodyssey #MarineLife
Love this! π¦ββ¬ππ¦πππ¦‘
www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
π¦ποΈ How did vibrant Amazonian parrot feathers end up in a desert tomb on the Pacific coast of Peru 1,000 years ago? Our new paper on @natcomms.nature.com reveals they didn't just trade feathers, pre-Inca societies transported live macaws and parrots across the Andes!π www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Macro photo of a brown stink bug in face view on a leaf, guarding a tightly-clustered bunch of eggs that are shaped and colored exactly like a full tray of dark beer with foam on top.
Finally, the bug is back with a round of the Guinness.
What have I been up to this week? Quite a bit, but here are the articles that have come out!
First up, (hopefully) everything you wanted to know about plesiosaurs:
www.nhm.ac.uk/discover/wha...
A new species of Spinosaur with a remarkable crest has been discovered in the Sahara!
www.sciencealert.com/astonishing-...
The BBC Olympics snowboarding commentary is bringing me so much joy.
Never before have I wanted two people to start a podcast this much.
So in the Bluesky user map, I find myself sitting in the Palaeontology Researchers and Educators. Which is fair.
But we definitely have the best neighbours. ππ
Imagination in bonobos!
I am thrilled to share a new paper w/ Amalia Bastos, out now in @science.org
We provide the first experimental evidence that a nonhuman animal can follow along a pretend scenario & track imaginary objects. Work w/ Kanzi, the bonobo, at Ape Initiative
youtu.be/NUSHcQQz2Ko
We got sheep! π
Come meet Barley and Rye in the gardens of the Natural History Museum. π
@nhm-london.bsky.social
A BBC news article about someone dressed in a purple dinosaur costume dumping rubbish in the streets.
I see Barney has turned to a life of crime. π
A bird is standing on a forest floor. It has a cicada bug in its bill, and its long iridescent purple-blue tail is raised behind it.
And yet more gorgeous wildlife images from this year's People's Choice Award! ππ»
Particularly love this one of a rufous-vented ground cuckoo with its lovely metallic orange-purple tail πͺΆπ§ͺ
www.nhm.ac.uk/discover/news/2026/february/vote-for-wildlife-of-the-year-nuveen-peoples-choice-award-2026.html
Great news for Svalbard polar bars, for the time being anyway. βοΈ
Interesting to see how some animals are adapting to the effects of climate change.
www.newscientist.com/article/2513...
This #FossilFriday, we have a new Paranthropus fossil that was recently discovered in northern Ethiopia! π¦΄
The latest discovery shows that this group was as widely distributed as other early human relatives, despite having a more specialised diet.
Check it out π
www.nhm.ac.uk/discover/new...
Headline: "Scientists discover emperor penguin colony in Antarctica using satellite images"
Yesterday it was cows using tools, today its penguins using satellite imagery.
Cows use tools! π§Ή
www.theguardian.com/science/2026...
A "chicken flap" in the wall of a chicken house, made out of an old toilet seat. (If they'd flipped it around, they could have also had a little entry ramp.)
I doubt I will ever see a more inspired bit of upcycling.
This is my 30th year as a journalist.
But I still continue to be shocked daily at the extent to which these same 'news'papers revel in wilful misinformation in order to relentlessly promote the ideology/interests of their senior editors and owners.
An utter disregard and contempt for their readers
Wallpaper depicting a drawing of Guildford. In the foreground are colourful drawings of flowers and kingfisher.
Every time I visit an Ivy restaurant, I always come away with new ideas of how I want to decorate my house.
Today in the UK, I dropped my six-year-old at school and came home. Alive.
Wednesday in the USA, Renee Good dropped her six-year-old at school and never made it home. Killed by masked government agents.
There are UK politicians who want Trump-style ICE enforcement here. Let's never vote them in!
Itβs official, 125 plants and 65 fungi were named NEW to science in 2025!
Every year, our botanists & mycologists work with partners across the world to officially name & describe new species to science π§ͺ
See our list of the top ten! π https://ow.ly/J7LY50XT51M
Thereβs something endearing about watching birds trying to walk on a frozen lake. π¦
Tired: Everything evolves to be a crab.
Wired: Everything evolves to eat ants.
Haha, no worries! The first week of January doesn't count anyway. π
Hereβs a link to the paper if you are interested. doi.org/10.1002/jmor...
Great question! I did see a paper suggesting that the front teeth were essentially for snagging prey and dragging it into the mouth, while the middle and back teeth speared and dragged it further into the throat. Which would make sense, but that is the only theory Iβve seen on this.
Preparing for the next climbing trip. π
Emma holding the cast of a spiral lower jaw of a Helicoprion.
I am constantly blown away by how weird and wonderful nature can be! π¦
This remarkable fossil is believed to be the lower jaw of a Helicoprion, an extinct group of shark-like fish that lived more than 270 million years ago during the Permian.
Its mouth was basically a buzz saw. π€―
Today is (apparently) National Trivia Day!
Hereβs my favorite fun piece of shark trivia:
Greenland sharks, which can live to be over 400 years old, have been found with reindeer and polar bear remains in their stomachs!
Itβs a cold one on the water today. π₯Ά