Inquirer on MSN
Earth’s ice is melting: where and how fast?
PARIS — Melting glaciers and ice sheets are raising sea levels while the Arctic is poised to log one of its worst winters on ...
A new study led by researchers at the Earth-Life Science Institute (ELSI) at Institute of Science Tokyo challenges a long-standing assumption about Earth's most extreme ice ages. Using numerical ...
Our planet plunged into one of the most dramatic climate states in its long history, approximately 720–635 million years ago.
Scientists discover that giant columns of softer ice within the Greenland ice sheet behave like pasta boiling, due to ...
BUFFALO, N.Y. — University at Buffalo scientists Sophie Nowicki and Beata Csatho are part of an international team chosen for a NASA satellite mission designed to improve predictions of environmental ...
The retreat of ice in the Barents Sea could be strengthening a key ocean current that regulates global climate.
When it comes to world building, some authors really put the effort in. In a new study, climate scientists attempted to model the environments of Westeros and Middle Earth – from A Song of Ice and ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Ancient sea ice salt may have helped lock Earth into global deep freeze
Between 720 million and 635 million years ago, Earth may have experienced one of ...
Even when Earth was locked in its most extreme deep freeze, the planet’s climate may not have been as silent and still as once believed. New research from ancient Scottish rocks reveals that during ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Researchers retrieve the deepest-ever rock core from beneath Antarctica's ice. It holds clues about the Earth's past—and future
Researchers are looking into our planet’s past to understand its future. Just like archaeologists investigate layers of dirt for ancient artifacts, geologists analyze layers in cores—tube-shaped ...
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