A puffin on Newfoundland's Southern Shore, who endured a traumatic injury resulting in the loss of its eye, faced an intense ...
A puffin on Newfoundland's Southern Shore who endured a traumatic injury resulting in the loss of its eye faced an intense recovery. But thanks to the help of volunteers and people at the Montreal ...
Two wildlife specialists recount the moment an injured puffin was rescued in Newfoundland and taken to the Montreal Biodome.
Toronto — Beaches across Canada's far northeast Newfoundland and Labrador province have increasingly been littered with mysterious white blobs. Their appearance has so far befuddled scientists ...
Mysterious white blobs of an unknown substance have been spotted by beachcombers in Newfoundland, causing local officials and residents to investigate the origin of the suspicious slime.
White blobs have been washing up on the beaches of Newfoundland recently, sparking an investigation by Canadian officials. They have been described by resident Stan Tobin as doughy - "like someone ...
Or sign-in if you have an account. Newfoundland’s shores have become the site of some unsightly flotsam in recent days — hundreds of pale, doughy blobs of an unknown material that has been ...
Oct. 17 (UPI) --Environmental authorities in Canada are trying to solve the mystery of unidentified white blobs that have been washing up on Newfoundland beaches. The white masses, which range in ...
The people of Newfoundland post all kinds of photos online of the captivating things they find washed up along the island’s 17,000 kilometres of coastline. Most of the time it’s run-of-the ...
(Submitted by Hilary Corlett) So-called mystery blobs began washing up along Newfoundland beaches last month, sparking questions over what the substance actually is — and now, one scientist says she ...
A Memorial University scientist says the mysterious white blobs washing up on Newfoundland beaches are actually gobs of plastic -- and they need to be cleaned up. School staff are being struck ...
Carr was able to use DNA to determine that a 5.6-metre-long stinking mound of goo — nicknamed the "blobster" by local residents — found on a Newfoundland beach in 2001 was a badly decomposed ...