Science
A Surprising Number Of Marine Animals Swim In Circles And Scientists Aren’t Sure Why – IFLScience
If you were to get up and walk a circle right now, it would probably resemble an asymmetrical, amorphous blob. Tracking perfect circles isn’t something hum

If you were to get up and walk a circle right now, it would probably resemble an asymmetrical, amorphous blob. Tracking perfect circles isnt something humans do all that often, but new research has found its surprisingly common among marine animals. The study, published in the journal iScience, used tracking devices to follow the movements of several ocean-dwelling animals and found that they swim in circles surprisingly often. Puzzling, as we dont currently know why.
The kit strapped to the ocean…
-
General22 hours ago
Queensland government strikes new deal with Bravus to defer royalties, expand Carmichael coal mine
-
Noosa News22 hours ago
Heartbreaking CCTV shows father and son moments before fatal crash in Regents Park, Queensland
-
Noosa News21 hours ago
Family’s heartbreak after Trevor Doyle found dead in park in Logan
-
General21 hours ago
Two men involved in fatal helicopter accident charged over stealing crocodile eggs from Kakadu National Park