New research paints the extent of human pollution across the planet's oceans: Pesticides and pharmaceuticals make up a large ...
High pressure in the deep ocean may squeeze nutrients from sinking “marine snow,” feeding deep-sea microbes and altering how ...
Rising ocean temperatures are shrinking the critical ocean foraging habitat of the California Current and driving humpback ...
Biological matter left behind in the water allows us to follow these animals without ever setting eyes on them.
Billions of mussels scorched and baby birds dropping from sweltering nests: North America's 2021 heat wave caused a cascade ...
First-year pre-medical students at Weill Cornell Medicine-Qatar (WCM-Q) in February explored Qatar’s rich biodiversity during ...
The ICAR-CMFRI launched a research project to study fishery resources around seamounts in the Arabian Sea, focusing on cephalopods. Funded by the Ministry of Earth Sciences, it aims to document ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Life's genetic code requires five key ingredients. The asteroid Ryugu has all of them, a new study suggests
The asteroid Ryugu, millions of miles away from Earth, might not look that exciting. But on it, we now know, lie some of the ...
A newborn cannot speak, read, or walk. Yet moments after entering the world, the infant brain already responds to rhythm and ...
For decades, ecologists have known that how a species looks or eats affects its environment. But a new study by researchers at the University of California, Santa Cruz, shows that social behavior ...
Dr. Maureen Raymo, a leading climate scientist, will discuss climate change and its impact on extreme weather March 23 at Muskingum University.
The project will also develop AI-based tools for automated identification of squid, cuttlefish and octopus species, which will significantly strengthen scientific understanding of deep-sea biodiversit ...
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