Planetary parade one-in-1000-year event
The bright string of lights in the morning sky this month is thought to be a one-in-1000-year event. Australia’s astronomer at large, Professor Fred Watson, explains why and where you can watch it.
The bright string of lights in the morning sky this month is thought to be a one-in-1000-year event. Australia’s astronomer at large, Professor Fred Watson, explains why and where you can watch it.
Photographer Dean Sewell joined the Anzac dawn service in Marree, a tiny outback town on the Oodnadatta Track in South Australia.
Invest in our planet on Earth Day by listening to conservation heroes, including oceanographer Sylvia Earle and wildlife warrior Tim Faulkner, on our Talking Australia podcast.
“Big and blacker than coal”: a behemoth comet is hurtling towards Earth, NASA says.
The Kamay spears are now on display at Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum.
Fourteen locally extinct red-tailed phascogales have been reintroduced to Mallee Cliffs National Park in western NSW.
Just when you thought Australia’s animals couldn’t get any weirder comes the astounding revelation that the ancestors of the platypus and echidnas evolved in Antarctica.
Record-breaking heatwaves hit both Antarctica and the Arctic simultaneously this week, with temperatures reaching 47℃ and 30℃ higher than normal. What on Earth is going on?
In a huge milestone, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has finally been aligned to produce the first unified image of a single star.
Since its grand debut 90 years ago, Sydney’s now world-famous harbour crossing has hosted creatures great and small.