News

But there is perhaps nothing blander than plain, dry chicken, and this guy should be embarrassed for electing to eat it that way. No seasoning, no sauce, not even any butter.
As if Tyrannosaurus rex needed to get any cooler, new research suggests that the famous dinosaur had teeth that were serrated like a steak knife. These days, just one living terrestrial animal can ...
In 1850, the Honolulu Friend published an unusual editorial from an unexpected source. Whalers who scoured the seas for the giant aquatic mammals knew well that large whales were beginning to ...
Iron coated teeth, venom and bacteria: A Komodo dragon's tool box for ripping apart prey Komodo dragons can give us insight into the way their prehistoric ancestors hunted and ate their prey.
Humans have sharp canine teeth, but we don't use them to tear meat. Like other apes, our ancestors used them to fight for mating rights.
Popeyes Louisiana Kitchen announced its brand new Tear’n Tenderloin Chicken, featuring one of the best kept culinary secret—the chicken tenderloin. Tear’n Tenderloin Chicken features two large, white ...
‘By tearing off the skin with your teeth’: The right way to eat mangoes according to Victorian women An excerpt from ‘Mango: A Global History’, by Constance L Kirker and Mary Newman.
The teeth of Komodo dragons, the world’s largest lizards, are coated in a protective layer of iron, a new study has found. When the nearly-200 pound dragons go after their prey — which can ...
Scientists have discovered that rarest of things: a chicken with teeth -- crocodile teeth to be precise. Contrary to the well-known phrase, "As rare as hens' teeth," the researchers say they have ...
But a chicken's underlying ability to grow teeth derives from a common ancestor with alligators--archosaurs--that is more recent than the one linking birds and mammals.