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A new review of ocean data suggests that more than 99.999 percent of the global deep seafloor has never been seen by humans.
For around 2,000 years, global sea levels hardly varied. That changed in the twentieth century. Sea levels started rising and ...
The drifting Antarctic iceberg A-23A came to a sudden stop in late February off the coast of South Georgia Island — a British ...
The nation's biggest cities are sinking, according to data from a new study. Known scientifically as land "subsidence," the ...
We know next to nothing about Earth’s seafloors. According to a study published May 7 in Science Advances, humans have only ...
According to a study conducted by the University of Bonn, droughts caused the land in Germany to rise by six millimeters ...
A new study reveals that less than 0.001% of the deep seafloor has been visually recorded, exposing major gaps in ocean ...
BTC price analysis 1-day chart: Bitcoin price faces a surge toward $104K Analyzing ... Bitcoin shows bullish volatility The RSI-14 trend line has surged from its previous level and trades around the ...