News

The sea turtle populations are showing signs of recovery, a new study finds. The study was published in “Endangered Species ...
Two continents collided millions of years ago, forming a bridge that changed Earth's climate system and triggered one of ...
As the Earth's crust shifted and groaned over millions of years, something extraordinary happened beneath the surface. Deep ...
It always feels great to get back to my old stomping grounds! I grew up near this river where you can find absolutely ...
Earth was once ruled by giant reptiles. Tyrannosaurus rex, the king of tyrant lizards, crushed bones. Spinosaurus hunted in ...
NASA’s DAVINCI mission is set to revolutionize our understanding of Venus. This daring expedition will send a probe plunging ...
Quanzhou, a city with rich cultural diversity, is once again at the frontline of international collaborations. As it forges ...
It all traces back to the slow closure of an ancient ocean known as the Tethys Seaway. Once stretching between the Atlantic and the Indo-Pacific, this vast seaway shaped the world in powerful ways.
A new global assessment has brought a dose of good news for conservationists: Decades of work to protect some of the ocean’s most ancient sea turtle populations are looking to be paying off.
Visit ancient Mars—a surprisingly temperate planet where snow or rain falls from the sky, and rivers rush down valleys to ...
"You could pull up Google Earth images of places like Utah, zoom out, and you’d see the similarities to Mars." ...