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New satellite maps reveal how oceans absorb carbon, offering real-time insight into climate shifts and ocean acidification.
The world's deepest tunnel you can drive through was set to be completed in 2025, but it looks like plans have changed. Here's what you need to know.
Deep below the surface of the ocean, bacteria and critters that feed off nutrients spouting from hydrothermal vents met with ...
Scientists found a rhythmic mantle plume beneath Ethiopia is slowly tearing Africa apart - hinting at the birth of a new ...
A new satellite-based product can now map the ocean carbon sink at unprecedented resolution.Although the oceanic sink for the ...
New research from the University of California, Davis, the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Texas A&M University reveals that ...
Despite decades of ocean exploration, humans still lack basic answers to one of the most fundamental ecological questions: ...
The ocean is far deeper than most people realize, holding secrets and mysteries that continue to astonish scientists and explorers. Covering more than 70% of the Earth’s surface, the ocean is not only ...
Deep down at the bottom of the sea, it is one of the most important natural archives of Earth’s past – holding clues of shifting climates, coastlines, ocean conditions and carbon storage.
Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUV) from the University of Sydney will be taking a deep dive in the oceans surrounding Norfolk Island to collect high-resolution seafloor images. The images will then ...
We have visually explored less than 0.001 percent of the deep sea floor. To put that in perspective, 66 percent of the planet is deep ocean, and 99.999 percent of that ocean is unknown to us. Like ...