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A cedar that The Beatles climbed, an oak featured in Virginia Woolf's Orlando and a beech from the final scenes of 1917 have ...
A first-of-its-kind study traces the rise of ant- and termite-eaters, revealing how mammals returned to the evolutionary ...
I’ve learned that home is not a place, it’s a feeling,” wrote author Cecelia Ahern, in “Love, Rosie.” Amid today’s heated ...
The fall of the Sycamore Gap tree was more than a loss of natural beauty. It was, for many, a symbolic attack on permanence, on meaning, and on shared identity.
Check out Craig Thompson’s latest graphic memoir, plus three other books that explore the range of the comics medium.
Have you ever examined timber floorboards and pondered why they look the way they do? Perhaps you admired the super-fine grain, a stunning red hue or a swirling knot, and wondered how it came to be?
History is full of strange, unexplainable events that can leave anyone scratching their head in wonder. From lost civilizations to unsolved murders, the ...
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