Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Deep-Sea Mining Test in the Pacific Drastically Reduced Biodiversity and Animal Populations
The Metals Company wants to be the first firm to commercially mine the seafloor. The study it funded suggests that mining ...
An ocean-mining company has funded some of the most comprehensive scientific studies to date, and peer-reviewed results have ...
Years of underfunding and new grant delays may force cutbacks on coastal weather and ocean monitoring that fishermen, ...
Dan Turner, founder of Blue Whale Technologies and a veteran environmental engineer with over 40 years in advanced wastewater ...
The quarter-sized creatures briefly surfaced during a water-quality survey, offering a fleeting glimpse of a species that ...
In May of 1993, rice farmers living near Lake Shinji, in southwestern Japan, began widely using an insecticide called imidacloprid. Within the same year, populations of arthropods that form the base ...
This story was originally published by Inside Climate News and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.
In June 2024, the Canadian government lifted the moratorium on northern cod fishing in Newfoundland and Labrador after 32 ...
RRS Sir David Attenborough scientists are trying to measure the potentially crucial role of ocean manganese, finds. But how do you do cutting-edge science in the inhospitable Southern Ocean?
Uruguay's government has approved seismic studies in deep waters of the South Atlantic to determine whether the country has ...
Cyprus Mail on MSNOpinion
Akrotiri wetlands: The cost of neglect
An infrastructural ‘tsunami’ is creeping in across the northern part of the peninsula By the BirdLife Cyprus team There is ...
Hosted on MSN
Poop Is Good for the Ocean, Scientists Say
There’s an elite club in surfing. One which, for entry, requires determination, desperation, and a smidge of shameless depravity. We’re talking about the pooping in the ocean (occasionally wetsuit) ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results