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Kangaroos are iconic Australian animals who have long been used as a symbol within the country to represent moving forward.
Snakes have adapted to climb trees, skate across hot sand, and even swim through water — all without arms or legs. What’s ...
Let’s take a look at six animals that have mastered the art of surviving in extreme dryness. Kangaroo rat Native to the deserts of North America, the kangaroo rat stays hydrated through the dry seeds ...
The Midpeninsula Open Space District has several projects planned in and around Los Gatos, including improving access to Bear ...
As long as Khamenei breathes, peace will never return to the Middle East or the world. Any mercy shown to him is a betrayal ...
Say Pocket Pokies runs a Christmas tournament with a $30k prize pool. Knowing when the leaderboard resets or how many spins ...
Twilight Hike: 7 p.m. Friday, Heil Valley Ranch, 1188 Geer Canyon Road, Boulder. Welcome summer with a 1.5-mile hike on the ...
“Waking Up and Growing Up” book signing: 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Boulder Book Store, 1107 Pearl St., Boulder. Diane Musho Hamilton will speak about and sign her new book “Waking Up and Growing Up: ...
Weighing just 500 grams (about 1.1 pounds), the musky rat-kangaroo stands out for its unique mode of movement among marsupials. Unlike its kangaroo cousins, it does not hop but uses a distinctive gait ...
Officially, the ngudlukanta – also known as the desert rat-kangaroo (Caloprymnus campestris) – is one of the many small Australian mammals lost to cats and foxes, but all hope is not gone.
When it comes to how hard an animal can bite, size always matters. There may be no truer a case of this than the desert rat-kangaroo (Caloprymnus campestris), known as the ngudlukanta.
An intriguing native Australian rat-kangaroo, thought to be probably extinct, may still be running around in the inhospitable remote Sturt Stony Desert -- and researchers have discovered new ...