Despite its small size, Mars seems to have a huge impact on the orbital cycles that govern Earth’s climate, especially those ...
For a long time, scientists assumed that Earth's water was delivered by asteroids and comets billions of years ago. This coincided with the Late Heavy Bombardment (ca. 4.1 to 3.8 billion years ago), a ...
These episodes feature cartoons about marine life that teach children valuable lessons about sea life, conservation, and much ...
New experiments suggest that Earth’s deep mantle, the hot rocky layer far below, once stored enough water in rock to equal one ocean. By squeezing and heating samples to deep-mantle conditions, ...
Early Earth got much of its water from relentless bombardment by water-rich asteroids and icy comets. Now, scientists say the young planet had a way to hold onto much more of that water than once ...
The European Space Agency’s first Scout mission, HydroGNSS, was launched Nov. 28, marking a significant step in advancing global understanding of water availability and the effects of climate change ...
In a significant leap forward for climate research and water cycle monitoring, the European Space Agency (ESA) has successfully launched itsHydroGNSS mission. The mission, which took place on November ...
Coral reefs have long been celebrated as biodiversity hotspots—but new research shows they have also played a much deeper role: conducting the rhythm of Earth's carbon and climate cycles for more than ...
Simulated suitability regions for warm-water corals over past 250 million years. Higher probabilities (red) reflect greater potential for coral growth. Researchers from the University of Sydney and ...
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