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A study of fossils from the Permian-Triassic extinction event 252 million years ago shows that forests in many parts of the ...
Earth's earliest life forms developed ways to survive the harmful effects of arsenic to cope with dramatic changes in their ...
The event in question is the Permian–Triassic Mass Extinction, also known as the “Great Dying,” which occurred around 252 ...
Researchers sequenced ancient Egyptian DNA from a 4,500-year-old skeleton, revealing genetic links between early Egypt and ...
Earth’s Oceans Were Once Green, And Scientists Say They Could Shift Color Again Tuesday April 15, 2025 Written by Gadgets 360 Staff Ancient green oceans may return due to climate change.
They are archives of ancient erosion,” Gernon explains. Before 650 million years ago, a colossal series of planetwide glaciations known as Snowball Earth shaved off up to a third of Earth’s ...
Ancient oceans with phosphorus-rich waters may have supported some of Earth’s earliest microbial life, according to a new ...
Ancient supernovas may have blasted Earth with powerful radiation, causing dramatic changes in our climate and could do so again, posing a threat to life.
A journey into the American Southwest reveals astonishing earth dwellings seemingly carved within natural rock formations, blending human ingenuity with the rugged landscape. Witness perfect ...
In an era when Earth is facing the threat of increased deforestation, a new research has given a warning about the importance ...
Rocks older than 4.03 billion years could shed light on Earth's earliest geological history, but they're incredibly rare.
Rocks from the Hadean Eon, the first period in the geological timescale, have been dated in Québec. These are some of the ...