A new, permanent and free exhibition at the Natural History Museum is designed to warn people about their impact on our "broken planet" and help them make changes for the better. Whale earwax and ...
Whale earwax and parasitic worms are going on display at the Natural History Museum in a new exhibition about the "broken planet". The free new gallery is designed to "explore the biggest challenges ...
Imagine a species with fewer individuals than seats on a school bus. Now imagine that each weighs more than the bus itself. That’s Rice’s whale, the only resident baleen whale in the Gulf of ...
The Natural History Museum’s first permanent gallery in nine ... parasitic worms and whale’s earwax. Displays will show how fungi is used to fertilise crops, how bacteria can be harnessed ...
The Natural History Museum ... research from the museum’s scientists and more than 250 specimens that tell the story of humanity’s relationship with the natural world, including a Sumatran rhinoceros, ...
The Natural History Museum’s free youth climate programme Fixing Our Broken Planet: Generation Hope is set to return this ...
Interestingly, birds remain woefully understudied when it comes to the optical extras. Until now, no one had looked for the ...