News
22h
Live Science on MSNJellyfish Lake: Palau's saltwater pool with a toxic bottom and surface waters brimming with millions of jellyfishPalau's Jellyfish Lake is home to millions of endemic golden jellies that live in the lake's top layer but never venture ...
1d
Space.com on MSNEarth's skies pulse in sync with the sun's solar flares"We've been able to show, for the very first time, that the sun's flare pulsations and Earth's atmosphere were pulsing in ...
2d
ZME Science on MSNScientists find remnant of Earth’s primordial crust in tiny crystals in AustraliaIn a recent study, researchers from Curtin University and the Geological Survey of Western Australia unearthed compelling ...
The moon spent a few million years as a volcanic wasteland, covered with ongoing eruptions that spewed from mountains and ...
A wayward Soviet spacecraft, adrift for more than half a century, will fall to Earth on Friday or Saturday, astronomers said.
Glaciers worldwide are archives of human pollution, preserving carbon from fossil fuels and wildfires in their ice for ...
6d
Live Science on MSNPhysicists create 'black hole bomb' for first time on Earth, validating decades-old theoryPhysicists have created a model of a black hole bomb in the lab for the first time, verifying a theory first proposed more ...
A recent paper published in Nature and Nature Astronomy finding life's building blocks on a near-Earth asteroid named Bennu.
What new technologies or methods can be developed for more efficient in-situ planetary subsurface analyses? This is what a recent study presented at the 56th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference ...
Stunning stellar explosions occur every second across the cosmos – some observable, most too distant to ever know, all of ...
Objects known as neutron stars, or pulsars, are the densest in the universe, but they suffer from seismic disturbances.
4d
The Brighterside of News on MSNMelting ice age glaciers triggered surprising changes deep within EarthAs the last Ice Age came to an end nearly 10,000 years ago, something unexpected happened deep beneath Earth’s surface. Large glaciers began to melt. The sea levels rose quickly—about 1 centimeter per ...
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