A road crew spotted a 14-foot Burmese python crossing a six-lane road in a posh Miami suburb recently. But how did it get there? Are more of the apex predator infiltrating suburbia?
Burmese pythons are a secretive bunch, making them difficult to spot and difficult to coax out into the open - that is, unless you're a robotic rabbit. According to the South Florida Water Management ...
The lives of creative people often seem interesting, exciting, or even glamorous. And sometimes, that's true. But often, they lead lives as simple as our own – except for those moments when they ...
Launched 17 years ago, the Tallahassee Film Festival returns this weekend in an expansive mood. It’s taking over Challenger Learning Center, the event’s presenting sponsor, and Kleman Plaza with a ...
Amazon S3 on MSN
Catching a giant python in the Everglades with Brad Leone
Joe Rogan Calls Tom Cruise ‘Nuts’ While Explaining His Candid Feelings on the Actor Trump floats moving press out of White ...
Burmese pythons are an invasive species in South Florida, negatively impacting native wildlife and ecosystems. State and federal programs pay contracted hunters to find and remove the invasive snakes ...
Customers at a Southern California In-N-Out location might have seen an unusual Double-Double fan slithering its way into the drive-thru this week. On Monday, Sept. 29, an In-N-Out employee at the ...
In 2005, Travis Oliphant was an information scientist working on medical and biological imaging at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, when he began work on NumPy, a library that has become a ...
It’s one for the hiss-tory books! Three enormous ball pythons were spotted slithering through Queens’ Forest Park Thursday, including one that was nabbed — and named Kevin by rescuers — and two more ...
Parks remain open but services and visitor centers in Everglades are closed. Some rangers and staff are furloughed, reducing law enforcement and upkeep. Private operators run some tours and ferry ...
The remote-controlled “Robobunny” is designed to lure the stealthy Burmese python out of hiding so trappers can pounce.
The ancient Egyptians took a number of measures to safeguard the pyramids. But did they ever resort to booby traps? The answer, Egyptologists told Live Science, is an emphatic no. "No, they didn't use ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results