Discovery that plants protect their most essential genes transforms our view of evolution.
The Earth’s Core Is Cooling Too Fast, And It’s A Major Problem
Anyone who saw the movie The Core all the way back in 2003 probably already knows everything about the inside of the planet already.
Earth’s Interior Is Cooling “Much Faster Than Expected”
Researchers at ETH Zurich have demonstrated in the lab how well a mineral common at the boundary between the Earth’s core and mantle conducts heat. This leads them to suspect that the Earth’s heat may dissipate sooner than previously thought.
Earth’s interior is cooling faster than thought
The evolution of the planet Earth can be described as the history of cooling over the past 4.5 billion years. The surface of the Earth was covered with a deep ocean of magma.
Mordor on Earth? Magma from the depths of hell is seeping through a mysterious crack
Somewhere in central Panama, there is an almost unearthly phenomenon of an opening going deep into the mantle. By Elizabeth RayneOriginal article Earth isn’t going to open up its gaping maw, dragonlike, and swallow us all into the inferno anytime soon, but it is exhaling hot breath somewhere under Panama. This obviously sounds like either …
Melting Arctic ice will have catastrophic effects on the world, experts say. Here’s how.
The Arctic is the "frontline" for climate change, scientists said. ByJulia JacoboDecember 24, 2021, 6:28 AM• 12 min readOriginal article If there is any doubt about climate change, look no further than the coldest regions of the planet for proof that the planet is warming at unprecedented rates, experts say. The Arctic, is heating up …
Cosmology’s biggest conundrum is official, and no one knows how the Universe has expanded
After more than two decades of precision measurements, we've now reached the "gold standard" for how the pieces don't fit.
What Is Math?
Math is imaginary. It exists in our mind when we have faith that numerals represent concepts.
Think Climate Change Is Messy? Wait Until Geoengineering
Someone's bound to hack the atmosphere to cool the planet. So we urgently need more research on the consequences, says climate scientist Kate Ricke.
Does the expansion of the Universe break the speed of light?
Just 13.8 billion years after the hot Big Bang, we can see 46.1 billion light-years away in all directions. Doesn't that violate…something?
