The slender-billed curlew was a species of wading bird last officially seen three decades ago. Despite the occasional ...
A breakthrough fossil discovery is changing what we know about some of the largest mammals to ever walk the Earth.
Rising temperatures are pushing many species to the brink, alongside disease, pollution and unsustainable fishing.
The fossil bird, which has been named Navaornis hestiae, lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil, ...
The Natural History Museum has today answered the billion-year-long question - how does a Tyrannosaurus rex wear a Christmas ...
Within days it transpired that Giuliana had recorded an invasive species not seen in the UK for almost two decades and in the ...
COP29 is a global climate conference organised by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. COP stands for ...
Whether you shoot in the wilderness or at the heart of an urban environment, Wildlife Photographer of the Year is open to everyone. Follow the links below to discover more about this prestigious ...
“Instead, mollusc or mollusc-like animals might be the pioneers of these early excursions onto land which date back to the ...
While some progress was made, crucial decisions on protecting nature will be left until next year after the meeting ran out of time.
Even the world’s most successful wild animal isn’t safe from climate change. As Antarctic krill face unprecedented challenges in the Southern Ocean, a new project has been launched to better ...
NHM uses our collection and the latest sequencing technologies to understand how krill have changed over the last century. Natural History Museum leads UKRI Natural Environment Research Council-funded ...