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Cities like New York are obviously not known for their wildlife. You won’t find wolves or jaguars or other charismatic megafauna strolling the streets or hunting in big city parks. But if you know ...
Hummingbirds are making pitstops in Tennessee and at your feeders as they make their way to Mexico and Central America for their annual migration.
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New Scientist on MSN‘Great Migration’ involves far fewer wildebeest than we had thought
An estimate that as many as 1.3 million wildebeest move across the Serengeti Mara landscape each year has been cut down to ...
Imagine your hometown could speak. What stories would it tell about the people who shaped it? If you live in cities like Chicago, Detroit, Pittsburgh and Los Angeles, you’ve probably heard a tale or ...
At least five financial groups or think tanks have published 2025 projections about "net migration" — how the number of people immigrating to the U.S. compares with the number moving out of the ...
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mlive on MSNIf the radar shows rain tonight, it’s not. You won’t believe what’s showing on weather radar
Radar doesn’t just show raindrops. Radar beams will bounce off of anything in the air and return a signal back to the radar ...
A third important driver of trends has been a change in the global destinations to which Africans now migrate. As ...
The spring birds are on their way back. Warblers, osprey, hummingbirds and more are all making their annual trip back North as the annual spring migration begins. And, you can track them via radar.
The “king” of the Lepidoptera family, the monarch butterfly, is passing through the Lehigh Valley on the 3,000-year migration it makes each year.
George Carlin had his seven words you can’t say on TV, but today there is only one ineffable (un-sayable) word in American ...
In summary, emerging migration trends are going to have myriad impacts to the U.S. economy in the quarters and years ahead.
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