Science offers a fascinating window into the natural world, and when combined with storytelling, it profoundly impacts how we see ourselves in relation to the world.
Not bad for a kid who once nearly burned down a house due to a chemistry experiment gone wrong.
The animals are known to be sensitive to trends, with scientists having observed odd new behaviours spreading through a pod like a TikTok challenge, only to be forgotten just as quickly.
The fest will run from 1 to 14 March, celebrating its 20th anniversary with a customary selection of ocean activities, the Wavescape Artboard Charity Auction, and several film screenings.
Perhaps their movement is another clue that climate change is not just a fear-mongering myth, but an actual thing. When the meanest guy in your hood moves somewhere else, something’s definitely up.
Things on Earth are heating up. Just the way the aliens like it.
If you were at the V&A Waterfront or Kalk Bay harbour at the right time in the last week, you might have noticed strange hooded figures in red or blue fabric walking around with a rope.
Four experts have unpacked whether or not living under the sea is possible, and what that might look like.
Scientists took a closer look at the boiling hot plumes of seawater shooting out of hydrothermal vents.
Remember An Inconvenient Truth? You watched it, right? This may shock you, but the vast majority of the planet we live on is constituted of aquatic environments, and inhabited by aquatic species. A new film premiering in South Africa later this month, The End Of The Line, is An Inconvenient Truth for the ocean. [VIDEO]