By studying elephant seals' hunting patterns, scientists have discovered a new way to monitor deep-sea fish populations.
Just as the human body serves as a habitat for bacteria and other microbes, diverse, tiny organisms known as protists host their own microbiomes.
A new study led by UC Santa Cruz marine biologist Roxanne Beltran, being published on February 14 as the cover story for Science, reports that seals can essentially act as “smart sensors” for ...
Heavy metal contamination in Yangshan Port raises concerns for seafood safety, with arsenic and mercury posing health risks.
Blue Origin is reportedly planning on letting go of approximately 10% of its workforce—about 1,000 employees—nearly a month ...
Elon Musk's internet satellites have been a game changer for people in rural areas, but scientists are alarmed that plans to ...
Have you noticed that when you watch someone move—like watching people dance, or watching your favorite sport—that you almost ...
Scientists using seismic data tracked groundwater levels beneath the L.A. area. They found heavy rains in 2023 boosted ...
The charred and toxic remnants of thousands of destroyed homes, businesses, cars and electronics will eventually come to rest in the ocean. Ash from the fires has been detected 100 miles offshore.
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But when the L.A. fires broke out, scientists aboard an NOAA ship inadvertently became the first investigators on the scene ...
Sea-based launches are hitting their stride. That could lead to a lot more space missions with a lot less red tape.
The rapid meltdown of polar ice could shut down a key ocean current by 2050, triggering catastrophic surges of sea level rise along the U.S. East Coast and dangerous climate shifts in northwestern ...
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