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30,000 fossils uncovered in the Arctic show how oceans came back to life after the ‘Great Dying’
Arctic fossils reveal the oldest known oceanic reptile ecosystem from the Age of Dinosaurs. Over 30,000 specimens show marine ...
More than 30,000 teeth, bones and other fossils from a 249 million-year-old community of extinct marine reptiles, amphibians, bony fish and sharks have been discovered on the remote Arctic island of ...
Chinese scientists have become the first to visit one of Earth’s most remote and geologically intriguing realms: an ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
What Chinese Scientists Just Discovered Was Exposed by a Submarine Deep Beneath the Arctic
A Chinese team has become the first to explore theeastern Gakkel Ridge, an underwater volcanic chain buried beneath the ...
Melting Arctic ice is revealing a hidden ecosystem where bacteria convert nitrogen gas into nutrients, fueling algae growth.
In a remote corner of Northern Norway, inside a dark coastal cave sealed off for millennia, scientists have opened a rare time capsule of life from 75,000 years ago. The bones and DNA traces of dozens ...
Climate change and the associated rising temperatures are melting more and more frozen ground in the Arctic. This dissolved ...
A large research study by an international team of scientists led by Christoph Böttner from Aarhus University shows clear ...
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