News

A new review of ocean data suggests that more than 99.999 percent of the global deep seafloor has never been seen by humans.
Oddly shaped deposits of tree resin point to massive waves that struck northern Japan roughly 115 million years ago and swept a forest into the sea.
This was no ordinary expedition. It marked the first in-depth study of the geology, ocean conditions, and marine life beneath ...
In this week’s Science for All edition, Vasudevan Mukunth discusses new research that estimated how much of the deep seafloor ...
We live on an ocean world. Yet we know surprisingly little about these oceans. In a new study published in Science Advances, ...
Led by the University of Delaware’s Andrew Wozniak, associate professor in the School of Marine Science and Policy, a team of ...
A researcher monitoring Axial Seamount, 300 miles off the coast of Oregon, says the eruption is expected to happen before the ...
Explorers know that the Earth’s oceans are vast, covering about 71% of the surface of the globe. According to a new study, ...
A new study reveals that less than 0.001% of the deep seafloor has been visually recorded, exposing major gaps in ocean ...
On the central coast of California, an eerie pattern of thousands of evenly spaced, massive holes pockmarks the seafloor, ...
Researchers witness gigantic iceberg A-84 breaking away from George VI, revealing an unknown ecosystem and giant phantom ...