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Live Science on MSNGigantic 'mud waves' buried deep beneath the ocean floor reveal dramatic formation of Atlantic when Africa and South America finally splitEnormous "mud waves" buried under the Atlantic seabed formed 117 million years ago as the Atlantic Ocean opened up.
According to geologists at the UK’s Heriot Watt University, gigantic waves of mud and sand sediment about 250 miles off the ...
New research from an international group looking at ancient sediment cores in the North Atlantic has for the first time shown ...
14h
Live Science on MSNThe decline of key Atlantic currents is underway, and it's been flooding parts of the US for 20 yearsNew research has linked sea level rise and an increase in flooding in the U.S. Northeast over the past 20 years to the ...
14hon MSN
A new study gives alarming glimpse into the future, as some scientists warn these currents could be just decades from ...
The Atlantic Ocean has a toxic seaweed problem. Floating in brown islands of algae, this year’s sargassum bloom has already ...
Heriot-Watt scientists have discovered giant underwater mud waves buried deep below the Atlantic Ocean, 400 kilometers off ...
14h
New Scientist on MSNUS East Coast faces rising seas as crucial Atlantic current slowsThe weakening of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) is boosting the sea level along the New England coast on top of sea level rise from melting ice, adding to flooding ...
18h
TCPalm on MSNTons of stinky, brown sargassum headed to Florida beaches. Where it’s going, what we knowAn estimated 31 million tons of smelly brown seaweed is floating int eh Atlantic this year, experts say, and Florida beaches could see more than ever.
The Atlantic Ocean may have formed millions of years earlier than previously thought, igniting a period of climate change, scientists found.
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