The continent has largely exhausted its fossil fuels and has banned Russian gas. That leaves renewables, which require fixing ...
An analysis of feldspar crystals within the oldest magmatic rocks in Australia has provided a unique insight into Earth's ...
Researchers examined 3.7-billion-year-old anorthosites from the Murchison region of the state of Western Australia, the oldest rocks on the Australian continent and some of the oldest rocks on Earth, ...
Based on a half century of data, new research shows that woody biomass, a major component of tropical rainforest ecosystems, has become a net emitter of carbon dioxide.
A History, by telling off professional historians – and laments the “cultural confusion” of our present moment.
Survival World on MSN
Does America or Australia Have More Deadly Animals?
James McCann counters with the Australian vibe. Sure, they’ve got venomous snakes and spiders. Every Australian mentions them ...
A 2019 satellite photo shows the recently resurrected "Marree Man" geoglyph, which mysteriously appeared in the Australian ...
New research has found that even Australia's most protected marine habitats are likely to suffer extreme ocean impacts by ...
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.
Two recently examined fossils suggest that Australia’s First Peoples valued big animals for their fossils as well as for their meat, according to a new study.
Extreme heat forged Earth’s continents billions of years ago, creating the stable foundation that made life possible.
These tropical forest CO₂ emissions may warn of similar shifts in other regions, a key topic for COP30 climate talks in Brazil.
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