ScienceAlert on MSN
Deep Beneath The Pacific Ocean, Earth's Crust Is Tearing Itself Apart
A careful analysis of the complex boundary where four tectonic plates meet reveals that one of the slabs is tearing itself ...
When Earth’s ancient supercontinent Nuna broke apart, it reshaped oceans, cooled the climate, and set the stage for complex ...
A study led by researchers from the University of Sydney and the University of Adelaide has revealed how the breakup of an ...
For decades, the end-stage life of a subduction zone existed only in theory. Now, for the first time in geologic history, scientists are bearing witness to the Juan de Fuca Plate tearing apart and ...
This shift in Earth’s tectonic tempo had profound implications above ground. With less volcanic carbon dioxide heating the ...
Scientists have traced the origins of complex life to the breakup of the supercontinent Nuna 1.5 billion years ago. This ...
A study led by researchers from the University of Sydney and the University of Adelaide has revealed how the breakup of an ...
Climate Compass on MSN
How Plate Tectonics Built Our Continents - Explained By Geologists
The dance of the continents has been reshaping Earth for billions of years, creating the landscapes we walk on today.
Space.com on MSN
Could these mysterious flashes of light in 1950s photos be UFOs? Some researchers think so
Data show that unidentified lights in archival astronomy images were 68% more likely to be imaged 24 hours after a nuclear ...
Live Science on MSN
Greenland is twisting, tensing and shrinking due to the 'ghosts' of melted ice sheets
Earth's mantle is so gooey, it takes eons for material that has been displaced by the weight of ice sheets to flow back. And ...
Live Science on MSN
Scientists discover first direct evidence that slivers of 'proto-Earth' may survive today
In a first, researchers have discovered fragments of Earth's precursor that contain distinctive chemical fingerprints in ...
Around 1,000 people registered online that they felt the earthquake, according to the Maryland Geological Survey.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results