#natural-history

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fromArtnet News
1 day ago

For Fashion Iconoclast Iris van Herpen, 'Nature Is the Best Artist'

Coral systems, skeletons, living alga, water, the coil of a snake, and the movement of a bird's wings are just some of the natural phenomena that have fed into van Herpen's visual language. Her couture pieces borrow the natural world's rhythms and structures, adapting them into gravity-defying garments.
Arts
#wildlife-documentaries
fromThe New Yorker
5 days ago
Television

A Century of David Attenborough

David Attenborough brought the natural world into everyday homes, shaping generations’ understanding through decades of wildlife storytelling.
fromwww.npr.org
5 days ago
London

David Attenborough celebrates his 100th birthday

David Attenborough turns 100, celebrated for wildlife documentaries that connect global audiences to nature and climate awareness.
Television
fromThe New Yorker
5 days ago

A Century of David Attenborough

David Attenborough brought the natural world into everyday homes, shaping generations’ understanding through decades of wildlife storytelling.
London
fromwww.npr.org
5 days ago

David Attenborough celebrates his 100th birthday

David Attenborough turns 100, celebrated for wildlife documentaries that connect global audiences to nature and climate awareness.
#david-attenborough
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
5 days ago

Happy birthday, David Attenborough! Beloved naturalist, BBC producer and regular bloke' turns 100

David Attenborough turns 100, receiving widespread birthday greetings and having a parasitic wasp named after him.
Television
fromThe New Yorker
5 days ago

David Attenborough Turns 100

David Attenborough turns 100 and continues broadcasting with Secret Garden, revealing UK domestic wildlife through vivid, factual storytelling.
OMG science
fromMail Online
6 days ago

How to travel around the world like Sir David Attenborough

A century of work reshaped public attitudes toward nature through emotionally compelling wildlife storytelling across many countries.
Miscellaneous
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

Tiny parasitic wasp named after David Attenborough for his 100th birthday

Scientists named a new genus of parasitic wasp Attenboroughnculus tau after Sir David Attenborough for his 100th birthday, discovered in museum collections from a 1983 Chile specimen.
#santa-cruz
OMG science
fromenglish.elpais.com
3 weeks ago

The Spanish woman who spent a year on a Philippine island and discovered another way frogs reproduce

The 18th and 19th centuries were pivotal for natural history, with ongoing exploration and study of biodiversity continuing today.
OMG science
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Cambridge offers botany course that inspired Darwin after rare archive uncovered

Plant specimens and teaching materials from Darwin's mentor will be used to teach contemporary students about botany for the first time.
#museum
Books
fromLos Angeles Times
3 months ago

6 essential desert reads

The Southwest desert offers rich, wild, and complex landscapes showcased through lyrical essays, memoirs, folklore, and illustrated guides revealing beauty, fragility, wildlife, and resilience.
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 months ago

Andrew Clements obituary

Andrew Clements, who has died aged 75 after a period of ill health, was for more than three decades the Guardian's chief classical music critic. His style was a model of critical integrity authoritative and intelligent, sometimes enthusiastic and sometimes slightly grumpy, dry-humoured yet never showy. Music may say things that words cannot express, but he mastered the rare art of putting music into words, always using language with precision; reading him, you knew what a performance had sounded like.
Music
fromHigh Country News
4 months ago

Meet the oldest rock in the West - High Country News

For many of us humans, old trees - gnarled oaks or towering redwoods - are sources of psychological comfort. As elders who have weathered earlier times of crisis, they signify continuity and resilience. Their rings bridge present and past and remind us that our "now" is only one of many. But for longer-distance time travel, we must seek out even more ancient ancestors. The ones with the longest memories, full of insights germane to our Anthropocene anxieties, are right here in our midst:
Science
#ohlone-culture
Music
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 months ago

Dorothy Parker fwowed up' in a 1928 review of which children's classic? The Saturday quiz

Fifteen quiz clues identify cultural, historical and linguistic answers including Gone With the Wind, Harris tweed, Andean condor, Prater, northern soul, and European nobility directory.
fromFuncheap
6 months ago

Free Admission Day at Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History

Connect with nature at the Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History, a place for learning, explorationand building community located in a beautiful building right on the beach in Santa Cruz. Permanent exhibits include wildlife and habitat displays, artifacts and cultural exhibits of the Ohlone, a garden learning center, plus exhibits on the geology of Santa Cruz, and Monterey Bay marine life.
Science
Television
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 months ago

BBC's Kingdom series gets viewers into the action' with TV drama techniques

Kingdom uses drama techniques, drones, and moving cameras to closely film predator interactions by a Zambian river, creating immersive natural-history storytelling.
Environment
fromPsychology Today
6 months ago

How Elusive Emotional Wolverines Connect Us With Nature

Wolverines embody vanishing wilderness and reveal links among animal minds, memory, meaning, and human experience amid changing natural landscapes.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 months ago

Beasts of the Sea: the tragic story of how the gentle, lovable' sea cow became the perfect victim

Steller's sea cow was discovered in 1741 and became the first marine species eradicated by humans by 1768.
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
7 months ago

From dangerous erotica to secret smoking canteens: ten things you didn't know about The British Museum

The first giraffes to arrive in London were not live, but stuffed. The first, a young specimen, came in the 1770s and from the 1810s it was dramatically displayed with two others at the top of the stairs of Montagu House, where the museum was then based. The British Museum then also covered natural history, which was later hived off to a separate institution in South Kensington, which opened in 1881.
History
Science
fromianVisits
7 months ago

See Hairy Styles with the Three Testicles at the Linnean Society

Wonder at the Linnean Society showcases Wunderkammer-style curiosities—hairy specimens, unusual objects and a notebook depicting three testicles; open free until March 2026.
fromNature
8 months ago

How a self-taught biologist transformed nature writing - and inspired Darwin

The first person to identify harvest mice ( Micromys minutus), Gilbert White was an eighteenth-century English curate and naturalist who has been called the 'father of ecology'. Yet records from his student days show that he was not so much a quiet country gentleman as a lad about town, losing money at cards and buying fancy waistcoats. In her grandly illustrated book A Year with Gilbert White, historian Jenny Uglow looks between these extremes to investigate who White really was.
Books
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
9 months ago

Tiny fireball that crashed into Georgia home is 4.56bn-year-old meteorite, say experts

A meteorite that crashed in Atlanta was found to be 4.56 billion years old, predating Earth.
fromenglish.elpais.com
9 months ago

Daniel Gomez, botanist: When we give flowers, we are giving sexual organs'

We know much more about plants than nature in general, but like all other areas, there are so many more unknowns than knowns.
Agriculture
Philosophy
fromenglish.elpais.com
9 months ago

Pulitzer Prize winner Jason Roberts: One of the great challenges of today's world is the appeal of simplism'

True science intertwines advancements with life-and-death consequences, highlighting a historical race for knowledge amidst perilous explorations and colonial undertones.
#mars
fromFortune
10 months ago
Science

You can buy a 54-pound Martian rock for upwards of $2 million in an auction also featuring a juvenile dinosaur that's 11 feet long

fromFortune
10 months ago
Science

You can buy a 54-pound Martian rock for upwards of $2 million in an auction also featuring a juvenile dinosaur that's 11 feet long

Science
fromFuturism
10 months ago

A Dinosaur Appears to Have Died on the Exact Spot They Later Built a Dinosaur Museum, Burying Its Fossil Underneath It

A 67.5-million-year-old dinosaur fossil was discovered beneath a museum's parking lot in Denver during geothermal drilling.
fromColossal
10 months ago

The 16th-Century Artist Who Created the First Compendium of Insect Drawings

Joris Hoefnagel created The Four Elements, a multi-volume collection with over 300 watercolor renderings showcasing insects and other natural specimens with remarkable detail and accuracy.
Artificial intelligence
fromGothamist
10 months ago

See a rare dinosaur or a chunk of Mars during Sotheby's 'Geek Week'

The sale features a six-foot-tall Ceratosaurus fossil, one of only four known specimens, expected to sell for between 4 and 6 million dollars.
NYC real estate
fromBoard Game Quest
11 months ago

Diatoms Review

Diatoms successfully combines beauty, strategy, and education, allowing players to create stunning patterns while learning about microscopic algae from the Victorian era.
Board games
fromianVisits
1 year ago

Natural History Museum film will compress 4-billion-years of earth's history into one hour

Humanity is the most influential species on Earth. We depend entirely on this magnificent planet, yet its future is in our hands.
Environment
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