A Stanford study challenges the expectation of large sediment deposits from a 34-million-year-old climate shift, finding ...
Stunning new deep-sea footage shows the sunken Titan submersible’s severed tail cone resting on the ocean floor after its doomed ... s tail cone wedged into the sand, with the remotely operated ...
According to highly cited conventional models, cooling and a major drop in sea levels about 34 million years ago should have led to widespread continental erosion and deposited gargantuan amounts ...
The Eocene-Oligocene transition marks one of the most extreme climate shifts since the extinction of the dinosaurs.
An aerial view later showed a dust-like cloud erupting as the remotely operated vehicle lifted off the ocean floor around 2.5 miles below the surface. The video, released by the Marine Board of ...
When seawater seeps way down into the Earth through cracks in the ocean floor, it gets heated by magma, rises back up to the surface, and is released back into the ocean through fissures called ...
Video released by the Coast Guard Marine Board of Investigation shows the remains of the Titan submersible on the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean after an implosion claimed the lives of all five on ...
The fish would also scratch the sand to uncover hidden prey ... The adaptations of sea robins to their ocean floor habitat might provide insights. For instance, genetic transcription factors ...
and subsequently ejecting the debris while the larger end caps fell to the ocean floor. While deep sea currents may have influenced the spread of debris, a spokesperson told Popular Science the ...
Chilling pictures have been released of the Titan submersible on the Atlantic floor after its implosion which killed five men. The OceanGate vessel was destroyed during the ill-fated expedition in ...
The researchers making the claim called for further studies into how oxygen is produced on the ocean floor while environmental groups called for a halt to disrupting the seafloor and mining of ...
The video, obtained using a remotely operated vehicle, captured images of the Titan's tail cone resting on the ocean floor with outer panels ripped off, showing remains of the vessel's wiring.