The Week is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.
Those living in São Thomé das Letras in Brazil got to see a "rain of spiders" when the Parawixia bistriata creates an intricate silk web during its reproductive and hunting phase. The social ...
So-called "zombie spiders" have been discovered in a cave between Co Cavan and Co Fermanagh. They were found by speleologist Tim Fogg in the White Father's Cave. Speaking on RTÉ’s Morning ...
Oh what a tangled web we weave when the multiverse becomes part of Spider-Man canon. The Spider-Man film franchise started simply enough, with 2002’s “Spider-Man.” Fast forward 20 years and ...
As the search began, they discovered a man named Hossein Nayeri was the mastermind. However, Nayeri wasn't alone in this crime. While he was the main bad guy, Nayeri received help from his two ...
60 years after his first comic book appearance, Spider-Man remains one of the world's most recognizable and beloved superheroes, thanks in large part to the excellent Sony and Marvel films ...
Spiders can reach their top running speeds again soon after self-amputating a limb – a trick that could inspire robots that can move more effectively when they are damaged. When threatened by a ...
His arrival is too late as CIA special agent Sonia had just been kidnapped moments before in an attack by members of the Black Spider Ninja Clan. Ryu pursues the attackers to rescue Sonia ...
The infected spiders - seen here with the fungus over its head and body - have been found in several cave systems across the island of Ireland It's the stuff of nightmares - or even the hit TV ...
In São Thomé das Letras, Brazil, hundreds of spiders rained down during a mating ritual, leaving locals stunned by the surreal spectacle. A rare and unsettling event unfolded in the quiet town ...
A new zombie pathogen has been discovered in Ireland. This insidious fungus infects cave spiders and alters their behavior to help spread its spores to new victims. Later expeditions found similar ...