Ancient glaciers reshaped Earth’s surface and shifted ocean chemistry, fueling the rise of complex life, a new study found. Calved icebergs from the Twin Glaciers are seen in 2013 off Greenland's ...
A team of astrophysicists, geoscientists, chemists and life scientists affiliated with a host of institutions in Japan has found evidence that billions of years ago, the Earth's oceans were green. In ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Ancient salt crystals shed light on Earth’s climate 1.4 billion years ago
Through the analyses of gases and fluids preserved within salt crystals, the team extended the direct record of Earth’s ...
Modern Engineering Marvels on MSN
Ancient air in salt crystals redefines Earth’s “boring billion”
What is shelf life on a breath of air? Well, it just so happens that back in northern Ontario, it’s 1.4 billion years.
New Curtin University research has revealed how massive ancient glaciers acted like giant bulldozers, reshaping Earth's surface and paving the way for complex life to flourish. The key to unlocking ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Earth’s deep mantle held far more ancient water than expected
Far below the oceans and continents we know, Earth’s deep mantle appears to have stored far more water in its early history ...
Scientists believe that Earth's core is a massive ball of iron. However, a new discovery suggests that the Earth's core is surrounded by an unexpected ancient structure. A high-resolution map of the ...
Asteroids the size of cities, like the one that wiped out the dinosaurs, slammed into the ancient Earth way more often than previously thought, a new study has found. Approximately every 15 million ...
Scientists widely agree that an ancient planet likely smashed into Earth as it was forming billions of years ago, spewing debris that coalesced into the moon that decorates our night sky today. The ...
A new technique for measuring the Earth’s magnetic field back to the days of the dinosaurs and beyond has revealed that the magnetic field was as much as three times stronger in ancient Earth than ...
Dustin Trail began his academic career in computer science, but he quickly realized he had a more specific interest: the geology of the early Earth and the mysterious origins of life. “We're at this ...
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