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Bubbling carbon dioxide vent discovered on the seafloor off the Philippines
Dec 31, 2019
Bubbling carbon dioxide vent discovered on the seafloor off the Philippines
Diving hundreds of feet below the surface of the ocean off the coast of the Philippines, scientists came across a bubbling hotspot of carbon dioxide. And this newly discovered vent might help us predict how coral reefs will deal with climate change, according to a new study. Bayani Cardenas, a...
Arctic sea ice goes through 'historic' loss in 2020
Oct 29, 2020
Arctic sea ice goes through 'historic' loss in 2020
Arctic sea ice has been in decline for a while now, but 2020 is turning out to be — by far — one of the worst years ever. Every year, like clockwork, the northern ice cap, or sea ice, shrinks in the spring and summer — reaching its minimum extent...
Mysterious 'dark river' may flow hundreds of miles beneath Greenland
Nov 17, 2020
Mysterious 'dark river' may flow hundreds of miles beneath Greenland
A giant underground river fed by melting ice could be running in a state of perpetual darkness far below the surface of Greenland, according to new research. Nicknamed the 'Dark River', this hypothetical waterway – if it truly exists, that is – may stretch for 1,000 kilometers (620 miles), flowing...
Ancient fragment of the Pacific Ocean found buried 400 miles below China
Nov 18, 2020
Ancient fragment of the Pacific Ocean found buried 400 miles below China
Scientists have identified an old piece of the Pacific Ocean – the ancient remains of its long-ago seabed – extending hundreds of miles underneath China, as it is pulled downward into Earth's mantle transition zone. This rocky slab that used to line the bottom of the Pacific is a relic...
Red Sea oil tanker 4 times as big as Exxon Valdez could spill any day now
Dec 16, 2020
Red Sea oil tanker 4 times as big as Exxon Valdez could spill any day now
A mammoth oil tanker is decaying into the Red Sea, threatening the water supply of millions of people and the world's most resilient coral reef. Known as the Safer, the vessel is 1,188 feet (362 meters) long and holds 1 million barrels (42 million gallons or 159 million liters) of...
US rivers are changing from blue to yellow and green, satellite images show
Dec 30, 2020
US rivers are changing from blue to yellow and green, satellite images show
A third of U.S. rivers have significantly changed color over the last 36 years, turning from blue to yellow and green, striking new images reveal. Researchers analyzed 235,000 satellite images — taken over a 34-year period between 1984 and 2018 — from NASA and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Landsat...
The Atlantic Ocean is widening. Here’s why.
Jan 28, 2021
The Atlantic Ocean is widening. Here’s why.
The Atlantic Ocean is getting wider, shoving the Americas to one side and Europe and Africa to the other. But it’s not known exactly how. A new study suggests that deep beneath the Earth’s crust, in a layer called the mantle, sizzling-hot rocks are rising up and pushing on tectonic...
Arctic Ocean was once a tub of fresh water covered with a half-mile of ice
Feb 3, 2021
Arctic Ocean was once a tub of fresh water covered with a half-mile of ice
The Arctic Ocean was once a pool of fresh water capped with an ice shelf half as thick as the Grand Canyon is deep. If that's hard to envision, don't despair. Scientists were surprised at the discovery, published Wednesday (Feb. 3) in the journal Nature, as well. The trick to...
'Pile of rope' on a Texas beach is a weird, real-life sea creature
Feb 4, 2021
'Pile of rope' on a Texas beach is a weird, real-life sea creature
A tangled mass of what looked like discarded yellow rope recently washed up on a beach in Texas. But this peculiar knotty pile wasn't garbage. It was a colorful sea whip — a type of soft, flexible coral. Rebekah Claussen, a National Park Service (NPS) guide at the Padre Island...
Pirate attacks linked to destructive fishing
Feb 26, 2021
Pirate attacks linked to destructive fishing
Pirates attack more often in waters where illegal and destructive techniques are being used to catch fish, a new study finds. Destructive fishing practices carried out by industrial fleets and illegal, unregulated and unreported (IUU) fishing can wreck local ecosystems and reduce the catches of small-scale fishers. As a result,...
Traces of ancient magma ocean found in Greenland
Mar 12, 2021
Traces of ancient magma ocean found in Greenland
Rocks collected in Greenland may hold traces of an ancient magma ocean that bubbled over much of Earth's surface soon after the planet's birth, a new study finds. Scientists gathered the rocks from the Isua supracrustal belt, a region in southwest Greenland where the exposed rocks are between 3.7 billion...
Scientists find deep-sea bacteria that are invisible to the human immune system
Mar 26, 2021
Scientists find deep-sea bacteria that are invisible to the human immune system
Bacteria collected from more than a mile below the surface of the Pacific Ocean may have just blown one of immunology's longest-held assumptions clean out of the water. The bacteria are so alien to humans that our immune cells do not even register that they exist, making them completely invisible...
Iconic 'Darwin's Arch' in the Galapagos has crashed into the sea
May 19, 2021
Iconic 'Darwin's Arch' in the Galapagos has crashed into the sea
The top of Darwin's Arch, the famous natural stone archway in the northern Galapagos Islands, has crashed into the waves, according to news reports. The arch, located less than 0.6 miles (1 kilometer) off the steep and rocky coast of Darwin Island, collapsed as a consequence of natural erosion, on...
Scientists just dug the deepest ocean hole in history
May 21, 2021
Scientists just dug the deepest ocean hole in history
A team of researchers working off the coast of Japan just drilled a hole in the Pacific seabed deeper than any hole in any ocean before it. On May 14, scientists aboard the research vessel Kaimei lowered a long, thin drill called a giant piston corer nearly 5 miles (8,000...
Sunken cities: Discover real-life 'Atlantis' settlements hidden beneath the waves
Jun 1, 2021
Sunken cities: Discover real-life 'Atlantis' settlements hidden beneath the waves
Humans need water to survive, and so access to this precious natural resource has been an important factor in deciding where we have made our homes throughout history. Building near rivers, lakes and springs gave early settlers access to clean water for domestic and agricultural use, and the availability of...
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