Gates of the Arctic might be North America's most remote national park, but it's home to some extraordinary animals.
Del Toro’s film presents the Arctic of the 1800s as a barren wasteland, which overlooks the existence of Indigenous peoples who have lived there for millennia.
Their fluffy fur enhances their cuteness, but it’s also a life-saving measure against the cold tundra of the Arctic Circle. So don’t let this newborn fool you–muskoxen are far tougher than they look!
Microbes near the surface of the Southern Ocean sustain the polar food chain — impacting the nutrient flow from the surface ...
Writer Kate Siber interviewed 50 biologists, researchers, educators, and advocates about the superpowers of animals. Her new ...
Melting Arctic ice is revealing a hidden world of nitrogen-fixing bacteria beneath the surface. These microbes, not the usual ...
Deeply frozen microbes are being awakened as a result of melting permafrost, which threatens to release massive amounts of ...
Researchers from the University of Copenhagen have discovered an important phenomenon beneath the Arctic sea ice that was ...
When temperatures sink well below zero and the ground freezes solid, most animals head for shelter or migrate somewhere ...