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The Brighterside of News on MSNWhat space dust can teach us about Earth’s climate history
For billions of years, Earth has been bombarded by tiny particles of rock and metal from space. When these extraterrestrial ...
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Live Science on MSNTrio of stripy glaciers merging in 'Earth's highest battleground' are part of a major anomaly scientists don't fully understand — Earth from space
This 2023 astronaut photo shows three glaciers merging into a single massive ice mass in the Karakoram mountains. The stripy ...
In 2023, the world’s oceans experienced the most intense and widespread marine heatwaves ever recorded, with some events ...
Some of Earth's largest climate systems may collapse not with a bang, but with a whimper. Surprisingly, experiments with ...
8d
Live Science on MSN96% of oceans worldwide experienced extreme heatwaves in 2023, new study finds
The most intense warming, which occurred in the North Atlantic, tropical Pacific, South Pacific and North Pacific, accounted ...
Scientists studying a puzzling hot zone beneath America, called the North Atlantic Anomaly, have proposed a mantle wave ...
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Space.com on MSNSatellite data reveals 2023 was record-breaking for marine heatwaves — are we at a 'climate tipping point?'
The impacts ripple into human systems — reducing fishery yields, straining aquaculture and affecting industries that rely on stable ocean conditions.
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ScienceAlert on MSNNASA Is Watching a Huge Anomaly Growing in Earth's Magnetic Field
For years, NASA has monitored a strange anomaly in Earth's magnetic field: a giant region of lower magnetic intensity in the ...
Peat fires and the climate puzzle While incorporating peatland fire feedbacks into Earth system models (ESMs) is essential for accurate climate projections, most existing models lack a ...
Something strange happens to water as it moves through the stems of horsetail plants – and this unique process provides ...
On July 9, 2025, scientists at the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service (IERS) reported that the Earth completed its rotation approximately 1.3 to 1.6 milliseconds faster than ...
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