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A recent study challenges previous geological assumptions, revealing that Earth's initial protocrust closely resembled the ...
Scientists urge tech solutions to curb falling satellites' impact—causing storms, crop risks, ozone damage, and higher ...
4d
ScienceAlert on MSNEarth's First Crust May Have Looked Surprisingly Like The One We Have TodayGeologists have made certain assumptions about how the crust making up our planet's earliest surface formed, but a new study ...
Deep soils vital for life host an active new microbial phylum, CSP1-3. These microbes may be key to innovative water ...
Scientists have discovered a new phylum of microbes in Earth's Critical Zone, an area of deep soil that restores water ...
15h
Discover Magazine on MSN5 of the Biggest Extraterrestrial Impacts That Moved Oceans and Made MoonsWhat are some of the largest extraterrestrial impacts to effect Earth? Learn what we’ve seen in history, and what is ...
Carbon-rich water sinks deep underground, locking away CO2 where it can’t harm the climate anymore, even during earthquakes.
3d
Discover Magazine on MSNNewly Discovered Microbes Cleanse Water That Trickles Through SoilLearn about a new phylum of microbes that lives in deep soil, a layer of the Earth that supports water cycling and nutrient ...
The Chicxulub asteroid crater supported marine life for 700,000 years, showing that some mass extinction events may help life ...
China has tightened control over the global rare earth supply by introducing new export restrictions that could disrupt ...
Phys.org on MSN5d
How we used AI to trace the evolution of bacteria on EarthUntil now, it’s been very hard for scientists to establish a detailed timeline of the early evolution of bacteria.
A new phylum of microbes has been discovered in the Earth’s Critical Zone. Ground water, which becomes drinking water, passes ...
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