The presence of glacial evidence in this location strongly supports the idea that ice covered the entire planet.
How much land, water, and other resources does our lifestyle require? And how can we adapt this lifestyle to stay within the limits of what the Earth can give? A new article tackles these questions.
In the first-ever worldwide assessment of the impacts of global overheating on these rare ecosystems, scientists used maps of tree cover ... Dr Ben Silver, School of Earth and Environment The results ...
With eight billion people, we use a lot of the Earth's resources in ways that are likely unsustainable. Klaus Hubacek, ...
Researchers mapped Earth’s ionosphere, part of the upper atmosphere, using signal data from 40 million phones – a method that ...
That region of the Earth’s atmosphere called the ionosphere can contain ... Once all of these measurements were combined, the ...
This study presents the first physical evidence that Snowball Earth reached the heart of continents at the equator.' ...
The amber, excavated from Pine Island Bay in the Amundsen Sea Embayment, provides a unique snapshot of life in prehistoric ...
We have an extremely incomplete picture of what these snowball periods looked like, and Antarctic terrain provides different ...
Eurasian reed warblers don’t just get a sense of direction from Earth’s magnetic field – they can also calculate their ...
As climate change enables the planting of trees further north, initiatives to establish forests in Arctic regions have gained ...