Scallops are a staple in any seafood diet. While we often see them on the table as food, their life in the water isn't widely known. These fascinating animals have more going on beneath the surface ...
Scallops are drawn to illuminated fishing pots like moths to a flame. The study examined the effect of LED lights on crab and lobster pots used by fishing boats off the coast of Cornwall, UK, and the ...
In the 1960s science fiction film Fantastic Voyage, audiences thrilled to the idea of shrinking a submarine and the people inside it to microscopic dimensions and injecting it into a person’s ...
For years now, scientists have been trying to develop microscopic robots that can swim through bodily fluids and repair damaged cells or deliver medicine. Now, scientists from the Max Planck Institute ...
Scuba diving and freediving allow us to see a different world than we are used to. Jules Casey, also known as @onebreathdiver on Instagram, is an award-winning Australian photographer who shares some ...
I was born and bred on Jersey. My father was part of the police diving team and did a lot of wreck diving, so he inspired me to start diving. I wanted a spear gun as a child but wasn’t allowed, so I ...
The idea of using nanobots to treat diseases has been around for years, though it has yet to be realized in any significant manner. Inspired by Purcell’s Scallop theorem, scientists from the Max ...
Diver Jules Casey shared a resurfaced video showing a scallop swimming by rapidly clapping its shell near Blairgowrie Pier in Victoria, Australia. The video, originally filmed years ago, has gone ...
Scallops are drawn to illuminated fishing pots like moths to a flame, new research shows. The study examined the effect of LED lights on crab and lobster pots used by fishing boats off the coast of ...
See more of our trusted coverage when you search. Prefer Newsweek on Google to see more of our trusted coverage when you search. Scallops are drawn to illuminated fishing pots like moths go to a ...