Earth

  1. Earth

    Pterodactyls may soar once more

    Paleontologists and aeronautical engineers are designing a reconnaissance drone that will mimic the flight of an ancient flying reptile.

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  2. Humans

    Arctic warming chills interest in fishing

    Featured blog: An October 7 accord could put U.S. Arctic waters off-limits to fishing.

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  3. Earth

    World’s largest tsunami debris

    Seven immense coral boulders — one of them a three-story-tall, 1,200-metric-ton monster — have been found far inland on a Tongan island and may be the world's largest tsunami debris.

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  4. Earth

    When trees grew in Antarctica

    Fossils of trees that grew in Antarctica millions of years ago suggest a growth pattern much different than modern trees.

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  5. Earth

    Earthquake history recorded in stalagmites

    Where stalagmites start and stop in caves could offer more precise clues about when major earthquakes have hit (and could again hit) the Midwest.

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  6. Earth

    A near-record Arctic melting

    This summer, the area covered by Arctic sea ice dropped to its second-lowest since satellite measurements began in 1979.

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  7. Earth

    Sea-level history off the ice

    For the first time, researchers have assembled a comprehensive record of how sea level varied between 542 million and 251 million years ago, more than doubling previous timelines for such fluctuations.

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  8. Chemistry

    Fluorescent bulbs offer mercury advantage

    Featured blog: Switching to light bulbs that contain mercury might, surprisingly, reduce overall mercury releases to the environment. Plus, what to do when you break your fluorescent bulb.

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  9. Earth

    Let’s Get Vertical

    City buildings offer opportunities for farms to grow up instead of out.

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  10. Earth

    Tough meteorite made a big impact

    The stony meteorite that landed in a remote portion of Peru in September 2007 was traveling abnormally fast when it struck and blasted a crater that was unusually large for the its size, new analyses indicate.

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  11. Earth

    New contender for Earth’s oldest rocks

    Observing rare isotopes in rocks along the Hudson Bay in Northern Quebec suggest the rocks have remained intact for 4.28 billion years, making them Earth's oldest.

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  12. Earth

    Continental clash cooled the climate

    The collision between India and Asia set off events that caused long-term cooling in Earth’s climate, new research suggests.

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