Slingshot spiders use sound-sensitive hairs to launch catapult-like webs, capturing prey with lightning speed and efficiency.
The tiny ray spider uses launches its web to grab its prey out of the air. Though common practice in the superhero world, ...
Scientists discovered that these spiders aren't just relying on sight. They're actually listening for their prey.
Tussles don't get much more titanic than Venom taking on Kraven. They are set to square off on the big screen and one has ...
Armed with a net and trident, fisherman gladiators were a staple of Rome's gladiatorial games. Their best chance of survival was to quickly entangle a ...
Explore 8 unlikable characters J.K. Simmons excels at playing, from ruthless villains to complex antiheroes that showcase his ...
The pinktoe tarantula is known to science as Avicularia avicularia, but it’s not the only tarantula working the pink booty ...
What do spiders’ webs, snowflakes and snail shells have in common? They all contain fractals: Nature’s exquisite, endlessly ...
These five bird species exhibit toxicity as a defense mechanism against predators, showcasing nature's surprising diversity ...
These five bird species exhibit toxicity as a defense mechanism against predators, showcasing nature's surprising diversity ...
Why is Christian Science in our name? Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The Christian Science Church, and we’ve always been transparent about that. The Church publishes the ...
Director Sam Raimi was the first to bring Spider-Man to the big screen, and it might help fans who miss the trilogy to dive ...