Live Science on MSN
Huge ice dome in Greenland vanished 7,000 years ago — melting at temperatures we're racing toward today
Scientists drilled to the bottom of Greenland's 1,600-foot deep Prudhoe Dome and found it disappeared in the early Holocene, ...
Tungsten (W, atomic number 74) has the highest melting point of all the elements, melting at 3,422°C (6,192°F or 3,695 K), ...
An expedition earlier this year to the Pamir Mountains in Tajikistan retrieved two ice cores from a glacier that seems to be ...
As popular mistrust of expert opinion grows, we increasingly encounter the following skeptical argument about science: ...
As popular mistrust of expert opinion grows, we increasingly encounter the following skeptical argument about science: ...
The Cool Down on MSN
Scientists issue warning as 'Doomsday Glacier' nears tipping point: 'Every single day we have a look'
"This data record is one of the longest, most consistent satellite data records in existence." Scientists issue warning as ...
New Scientist on MSN
Northern Greenland ice dome melted before and could melt again
Prudhoe Ice Dome disappeared during a warm period 7000 years ago. Global warming could cause similar temperatures by 2100, ...
Some 445 million years ago, life on Earth was forever changed. During the geological blink of an eye, glaciers formed over ...
Rather than yeast or microalgae, the company is working with oleaginous bacteria—which it claims are more productive.
A recent study reveals that hidden cracks and a failing seabed anchor are gradually pushing Antarctica’s Thwaites Glacier, also known as the 'Doomsday Glacier', towards collapse.
The Large Hadron Collider is going to be shut down — not permanently, but for a pretty long time — and the famous atom ...
The Bayan Obo deposit is not only the world's largest rare earth deposit and the third-largest niobium deposit, but also a ...
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