Jawbone of giant vampire bat that sucked blood 100,000 years ago unearthed Jul 28, 2021 Jul 28, 2021 Updated Feb 7, 2023 0 Kael Combs, Bennett Stirtz, Tate Sage | Iowa Men's Basketball | March 27 Erik Per Sullivan turned down 'buckets of money' for Malcolm In The Middle reboot. Wireless Festival cancelled after Kanye West blocked from entering UK Highlights from Tuesday’s Shenandoah/Clarinda tennis dual Monks hold Easter prayers in deserted Old City of Jerusalem Iranian government minister dismisses Trump threat in AP interview 'Amazing way to finish off the season' - UCLA on claiming 1st 1st NCAA women’s basketball title War in the Middle East: Donald Trump threatens to hit Iran power plants Budget-Friendly Materials to Pave Your Garden Path Mamdani enlists Cardi B to promote free child care There are now only three vampire species still around and this one was the largest we know to have ever lived. As featured on Scientists figure out how vampire bats got a taste for blood "They are really weird, even among bats," one researcher said. Latest video Families of Gilgo Beach murder victims express gratitude for Rex Heuermann’s guilty pleas Preserving rural Jewish life is the focus of a Maine center this Passover Did US really secure 'overwhelming military victory' in Iran? Iran ceasefire holds as Hegseth calls war ‘a historic and overwhelming victory’ UK: Pro-Iranian Protesters Rally Outside Downing Street Against US Military Action in Iran US, Israel and Iran agree to 2-week ceasefire as Trump pulls back on threats China: China-made window cleaning robot wins global consumers. Son of Gilgo Beach victim files wrongful death suit against Rex Heuermann and his family Facebook Twitter Bluesky WhatsApp SMS Email Print Copy article link Save 0 Comments
Scientists figure out how vampire bats got a taste for blood "They are really weird, even among bats," one researcher said.