Shearwater Geoservices will start a multi-client 3D seismic campaign in the Pelotas basin offshore Brazil, with work to wrap up in early 2026. The survey, in partnership with Searcher Seismic, will be ...
Nashville-based health care staffing company Shearwater Health is entering a new phase of expansion as it ramps up global and domestic operations while exploring new acquisition opportunities.
A study from Japan inadvertently discovered just how much frequent defecation by a large sea bird contributes to the ocean's ecosystem. Audubon reported that the research, published in Current Biology ...
Recent sightings (through Sept. 23) as reported to Mass Audubon. A yellow-headed blackbird was seen in Truro, and a Eurasian whimbrel was seen on private property in West Dennis. Birds at Race Point ...
Norwegian offshore seismic specialist Shearwater Geoservices is in talks with up to four major oil and gas operators to conclude long-term capacity reservation agreements that it says could put an end ...
Yesterday morning, I was privy to yet another impressive showing of fall seabirds on Cape Cod Bay. Tragically, I was otherwise disposed at the time co-hosting a live, call-in radio show about birds, ...
The birding group has rebranded as NYC Bird Alliance because of John James Audubon’s connections to slavery. By James Barron Good morning. It’s Tuesday. We’ll look at a name change that has put a well ...
In “The Birds That Audubon Missed,” Kenn Kaufman delves into the fierce, at times unethical, competition among early American ornithologists. By Benjamin P. Russell By the time Kenn Kaufman finished ...
In the 1800’s John James Audubon broke ground by making life-size illustrations of all the birds in America. The portraits provided a groundbreaking guide to the natural world and are equally valuable ...
Although I have procured this species to the westward of the banks of Newfoundland, or between their soundings and the American coast, I am unable to say any thing of importance respecting its habits ...
We know a rose by any other name would smell as sweet because Shakespeare told us so. Now the question arises: would a bird by any other name tweet as sweet? The answer is a definite “yes,” according ...
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