Between 720 million and 635 million years ago, Earth may have experienced one of ...
Our planet plunged into one of the most dramatic climate states in its long history, approximately 720–635 million years ago.
Scientists discover that the Earth's magnetic poles can take up to 70,000 years to reverse, much longer than previously ...
Gravity may seem constant, but it actually varies across the planet—and one of the strangest places is Antarctica, where gravity is slightly weaker than expected. Scientists have traced this “gravity ...
Ocean temperatures may be quietly protecting the world from a global drought catastrophe. By analyzing more than a century of ...
Underwater earthquakes in Antarctica can trigger massive phytoplankton blooms, linking deep-sea seismic activity to ocean ...
Sixty-five per cent of the exploratory dives into the deep have taken place within 200 nautical miles of either the US, Japan ...
UC College of Arts and Sciences Professor Thomas Algeo has been studying the planet's five major mass extinctions since the ...
A persistent "gravity hole" beneath Antarctica gives scientists a window into Earth's deep interior, showing how processes ...
Lost fossils reveal that some of the first ocean predators went global astonishingly fast after Earth’s worst extinction.
The pace of global warming has nearly doubled since 2015, a new study published today in Geophysical Research Letters has ...
The “gravity hole” formed at least 70 million years ago after convection in Earth’s mantle. The weak gravity could impact our ...