Traces of organisms detected in sediments from 7.5 kilometers below the ocean surface reveal how organisms living in the deep sea are engineering their own environments. Analyses of sediment cores ...
More pocked with craters than any other object in our solar system, Jupiter's outermost and second-biggest Galilean moon, Callisto, appears geologically unremarkable. In the 1990s, however, NASA's ...
Organisms in the deep sea rely on gravity flows to lay down sediment and then make burrows beneath the seafloor, according to a new study.
This Google Maps image captured in 2021 revealed a mysterious, triangular dark patch in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, ...
Organically Human on MSN5d
Earth May Get a New Ocean and Continent Sooner Than ExpectedRoughly 250 million years ago, traveling from present-day Australia to North America would have been surprisingly simple-a ...
A long-lost oceanic plate is diving deep into the mantle, dragging down the crust above, researchers say. However, the plate is also tearing apart below the Zagros Mountains in Iraq as it plunges ...
One of the most active volcanoes in the world sits just a few hundred miles off the U.S. West Coast, and some scientists ...
Whether you’re battling a heat wave, an overzealous radiator, or a landlord who takes months to turn on the central air, the right floor fan can bring instant relief to the stickiest of ...
Killing Floor 3 is back and bloodier and than ever. Set to paint March red with zombie guts, Tripwire's long-awaited third instalment in the horde shooter series finally has a firm release date in ...
19d
Hosted on MSNScientists Unravel the Mystery Behind Strange Holes Spewing Warm Fluids on the Pacific Ocean FloorThe unusual holes in the ocean didn't reveal an underwater volcano or some hydrothermal vents, but rather something remarkable.
Their research revealed that in the present day, deep below the Earth’s surface, the Neotethys oceanic plate – the ocean floor that used to be between the Arabian and Eurasian continents ...
Known as A23a, the 1,400-square-mile iceberg had been stuck on the ocean floor near Antarctica for 37 years after splitting in 1986 from the Antarctic’s Filchner Ice Shelf. But it began to ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results