A shark may have been spotted swimming near London’s Hammersmith Bridge, according to experts and the woman who filmed the dark object. Charlotte Webb said she was walking alongside the Thames with a ...
A report from the Zoological Society of London revealed that the Thames river — which was previously declared "biologically dead" — is home to over 115 species of fish Despite being considered ...
A new study has found that venomous sharks are amongst the hundreds of wildlife species that now inhabit the River Thames. It turns out that we're gonna need a bigger... notebook to take stock of the ...
London’s River Thames was declared “biologically dead” in 1957 due to high levels of pollution. Sixty-four years later, it is boasting lower levels of chemicals and now sustains an ecosystem of more ...
Sharks have made the Thames their home thanks to extraordinary conservation efforts that have brought the capital’s river back from the brink. The Thames was declared “biologically dead” in 1957 ...
Sharks are living in the River Thames, according to findings from the waterway’s first “health check” since it was condemned as “biologically dead” 64 years ago. The Greater Thames Shark Project, run ...
London’s famous river is more exciting than we thought. Seahorses, eels, seals — and venomous sharks — have all been discovered in the Thames, the results of a “health check” have shown. A survey by ...
London’s famous river is more exciting than we thought. Seahorses, eels, seals — and venomous sharks — have all been discovered in the Thames, the results of a “health check” have shown. A survey by ...
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