Scientists exploring a World War II weapons dumpsite in the Baltic Sea have discovered swarms of sea creatures thriving on ...
Learn how sunken weapons and warships have become crucial underwater habitats for animals all over the world.
Paris — Marine life is thriving on unexploded Nazi bombs sitting at the bottom of a German bay, a submersible has discovered, ...
Nearly 100 years ago dozens of ships were abandoned in a shallow bay in the Potomac River. Today plants and animals are ...
A new study has found evidence to suggest that warheads tossed into the sea can serve as viable habitat for several species ...
An undersea submersible has spotted crabs, worms and fish thriving on the surfaces of World War II explosives thought to be ...
Toxic explosives were no barrier for the fish and invertebrates colonizing a World War II-era munitions dump in the Baltic Sea, according to a new study.
Scientists say we've already exceeded seven of nine planetary boundaries contributing to Earth's stability, life support and ...
Vibrio vulnificus, a bacterium that is potentially very dangerous to humans, is a natural component of marine plankton. The ...