For those who saw the colors of the ocean change to red off the Santa Monica Pier this week, it wasn’t a shark attack, but ...
And although the band of ancient craters is the only physical evidence such a ring ever existed, life on Earth likely ...
Although evidence of life on Mars hasn’t been discovered during any of NASA's robotic missions yet, scientists believe it ...
A new discovery by scientists at the University of Basel in Switzerland has revealed how tiny ocean algae, known as diatoms, ...
Tiny diatoms in the ocean are masters at capturing carbon dioxide from the environment. They fix up to 20 percent of the Earth's CO2. A research team has now discovered a protein shell in these algae ...
It is hoped technology can help alleviate the problem with algae Space technology is to be ... interaction and collaboration to develop new products, services and solutions in relation to the ...
Brazilian researchers, through the reconstruction of the evolutionary tree of life from ancient amoebas and the ancestors of algae ... Earth to some 260 million years earlier than the paradigm, well ...
In other words, the study dates the mass diversification of life on Earth to some 260 million years earlier than the paradigm, well before the Cambrian explosion (the emergence of new ...
The new satellite is temporary: it will leave again at the end of November. And it is very small, at just 10 metres across. But it is one of a very few times that we have seen the Earth acquire a ...
On Sunday, Sept. 29, Earth captured a new "mini-moon" called 2024 PT5. The bus-size asteroid is expected to orbit our planet for 57 days, but is too small to be visible to amateur skywatchers.
Rockström is a research professor in earth system science at University Potsdam, the director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, and co-founder of the Planetary Guardians.
Astronomers have discovered a planet orbiting the closest solo star to Earth. The solo star, which is known as Barnard’s star, is a red dwarf which is around 80% smaller than our sun and sits ...