Fast, curious, and unflinchingly bold, the tayra is one of South America’s most extraordinary small predators. This film delves into its hunting behavior, habitat, and surprising diet, showing how ...
72 Dangerous Animals: Latin America Season 1 is a gripping 2017-released wildlife docuseries. Host Bob Brisbane takes the viewers on a journey across the forests and wilderness of South America. Based ...
The Tremembé Formation itself is the only fossil-rich unit in Brazil from the Late Oligocene that preserves mammal remains. Over the past decades, it has yielded a rich mosaic of life: bats, ...
Capybaras, the world's largest rodents, are renowned for their gentle nature and remarkable ability to coexist peacefully ...
His CIA code name is Condor. In the next seventy-two hours almost everyone he trusts will try to kill him.
New research shows how young dinosaurs like Uberabatitan and Neuquensaurus used strength and balance to rise up on two legs.
Scientists have suspected a unique small cat roamed Central and South America for more than a decade, but it took intense genetic work and 40 experts to put all the pieces together. When Joel Sartore ...
TAOS — After a five-year hiatus, and just in time for spring, Stuart Wilde is once again bringing humans, llamas and nature together through Llama Earth Adventures, which offers guided outdoor ...
Q. I saw the following quote on a poster at a wildlife sanctuary in Florida: “Cranes are large birds with long beaks found on every continent except Antarctica and South America." I understand cranes ...
Researchers have found evidence of butchery marks on the back of an ancient armadillo-like animal, suggesting humans were in South America 20,000 years ago — earlier than many researchers thought.
Ancient humans in South America may have kept foxes as pets, according to archaeologists. Their finding comes from excavations at a grave site in northwest Patagonia in Argentina, named Cañada Seca.