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Swansea University

A green turtle comes up for air. Like many air-breathing marine megafauna, green turtles optimise their swim depth during migration to minimise the cost of transport, travelling at around three body-depths beneath the surface in order to avoid creating waves whilst maximising horizontal distance travelled (Picture © R. D. and B. S. Kirkby).

Marine Animals Find Energy-Saving Sweet Spot for Ocean Travel

Categories Life & Non-humans, Physics & Mathematics
Logan Zhang, a PhD student at Swansea University's Faculty of Science and Engineering, printing materials in a lab.

Coral-Inspired Material Could Transform Bone Repair

Categories Health, Technology
a hand

Your Ring Finger Length Could Reveal Your Drinking Habits, Scientists Find

Categories Health
A female chacma baboon grooms a male on the Cape Peninsula, South Africa,

Unexpected link between grooming and physiological stress in wild baboons

Categories Life & Non-humans
elderly

Link found between hand size and COVID-19 severity

Categories Health

The value of seagrass to the planet’s future is far greater than appreciated

Categories Earth, Energy & Environment

How fingers could point to a link between low testosterone and Covid hospitalizations

Categories Health

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