FREDERICTON, NB - New Brunswick's deer biologist says it was a tough winter for the four legged creatures in the province, especially in the north. Rod Cumberland is with the Department of Natural Resources and says the winter of 2007/08 has proven extra deadly for deer.
Community events Bingo hosted by Manchester American Legion Post 208 will take place at 6:45 p.m. every Thursday at 225 Old Sulphur Spring Road in Manchester. For more information, call (636) 391-9424.
Can sci-fantasy series Sanctuary navigate the no-man's-land of network television to thrive where others have failed? It's almost a year to the day since Sanctuary began. Championed as "the first broadcast-quality, high definition dramatic series designed specifically for the Internet", it seems an appropriate moment to take stock of Stage 3 Media's web-exclusive experiment. With an innovative
Fredericton- New Brunswick's Deer Biologist says it was a tough winter for the four legged creatures in the province, especially in the north. Rod Cumberland is with the Department of Natural Rresources and says the winter of 2007/08 has proven extra deadly for deer.
With improved resolution, tissue-specific molecular markers and precise timing, University of Oregon biologist James A. Weston and colleagues have possibly overturned a long-standing assumption about the origin of embryonic cells that give rise to connective and skeletal tissues that form the base of the skull and facial structures in back-boned creatures from fish to humans.
NORTHAMPTON - Walking into Joe Peters' booth at the Paradise City Arts Festival is like stepping into a miniature underwater world with octopuses, scuba divers, colorful fish and other sea creatures.
Watch out! It wouldn't be Memorial Day in Florida without a trip to the beach or ride down the river. You know to keep an eye out for sharks and gators. But keep your distance from other potentially dangerous creatures, too.
Evidence of DDT is showing up in Lake Calumet area creatures Some of Illinois' rarest and most imperiled birds return each spring to marshes on Chicago's Southeast Side, where they weave nests of loose reeds, start the season's courtship rituals and, scientists believe, resume ingesting a poison most people thought was gone a generation ago.
The funny little man in the space suit, legs pumping, speeds across bare, pockmarked terrain. Tense music, worthy of an Indiana Jones chase scene, builds as menacing metallic creatures close in and rise up behind him.