New Zealand marine scientists were thawing the corpse of the largest squid ever caught to try to unlock some of the secrets of one of the ocean's most mysterious beasts.
A hairy corpse crammed in a Georgia freezer is Bigfoot, say two men who have been tracking the legendary creature, when they aren't busy looking for leprechauns and the Loch Ness monster.
Bacteria that deposit gold onto the hair of corpses could complicate forensics.
Rare 'Corpse Flower' that smells of rotting meat set to bloom at university greenhouse, likely within a week.
A foul-smelling, aptly named “corpse flower” at Western Illinois University has bloomed, releasing a powerful aroma of rotting meat.
... Titan Arum (Titan #3), known as the Corpse Flower, housed in the Western Illinois University ... for Titan #3 has been set up at http://www.ustream.tv/channel/wiu-corpse-flower ...
... the rotten flesh-like stench of the garden's about-to-blossom Titan Arum, also known as the corpse plant ...
... Titan Arum - known as Titan #3 and as the "Corpse Flower" - is in the process of opening this afternoon ( June ...
... . One of their largest charges - the Amorphophallus titanum a.k.a. corpse flower or titan arum - is getting ready ...
... , the most common way to bury the dead has been to lay the corpse in a casket and then bury the casket several ... environmental and health problems due to the fact that the corpses do not receive enough oxygen to quickly ...
... more ancient than scientists previously thought, scavenging corpses in the abyss long before mammals ever ...
... headless human corpse floating in a bay of Lake Brienz in Switzerland — first thought to be a dead ...
... timeImages of Muammar Gaddafi's bruised and bloodied corpse caused a sensation last month. Most unsettling ... people posing in photos before his corpse.But even those who find these images repulsive can understand ...
... new possibility--the presence of abundant comet corpses in the solar wind. The new research is based ...
A rare — and stinky — corpse flower is blooming now at Cornell University, and those who are curious can watch, though sadly (or maybe happily) not smell, the spectacle on a live Web stream.