News

What do you do with more than 130 arsenic-tinged taxidermied animals with significant historical and academic value, languishing in a now-closed museum, that may or may not be a public health hazard?
Someone tweeted a photo of a man and his peacock riding the New York City subway. The most shocking part of the photo is that no one seems to notice.
On Thursday, Matthew Chayes, a politics reporter for Newsday, tweeted an image of a guy riding the subway while carrying a taxidermied peacock, who appears to be as tall as the train car (if you ...
Scientists are sounding the alarm about taxidermied bats commonly sold online in frames, jars, coffins, jewelry, and more. It’s a wild animal trade that has flown under the radar and that poses ...
What do you do with more than 130 arsenic-tinged taxidermied animals with significant historical and academic value, languishing in a now-closed museum that may or may not be a public health hazard?
Billings, Mont., designer Jeremiah Young decorates with taxidermy such as buffalo, moose and even a white peacock to “bring nature into a home and preserve the beauty of animals in places where ...
The rogue taxidermy movement has been gaining ground in Southern California for about a decade. L.A. practitioners include Catherine Coan, Ave Rose and Brooke Weston, great granddaughter of the ...
It was 2013 and Allis Markham was working as a director of social media strategy at Disney in the Los Angeles area when she decided to spend two weeks in Montana to learn the art of taxidermy.
A taxidermied anteater, of all things, is at the center of a scandal plaguing a global wildlife photography competition. The Natural History Museum in London announced Friday that it has ...
A straphanger on the New York City subway is drawing attention online after he was photographed holding a giant peacock on the train.