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'This could be the origin of the Atlantis legend': Mountain that sank beneath the waves discovered off Canary Islands
By Hannah Osborne published
A large seamount with three inactive volcanoes that sank into the ocean millions of years ago off the coast of Lanzarote may have inspired the legend of Atlantis.
1st map of Antarctica's green space unveiled. Here's what it shows.
By Claudia Colesie published
Fossils from Greenland's icy heart reveal it was a green tundra covered in flowers less than 1 million years ago
By James Bonthron published
Greenland was almost completely ice-free at some point in the last one million years, fossilized flowers from a core sample taken from the center of the island reveal.
Yarlung Tsangpo: The deepest canyon on land hides a tree taller than the Statue of Liberty
By Sascha Pare published
The Yarlung Tsangpo Grand Canyon is Earth's largest terrestrial canyon, stretching 314 miles long and almost 20,000 feet from top to bottom at its deepest point in the Tibet Autonomous Region.
Physicists solve nuclear fusion mystery with mayonnaise
By Tia Ghose published
The same physics that underlie mayonnaise could help physicists corral the ultrahot plasma needed to produce nuclear fusion.
Scientists drill longest-ever piece of Earth's mantle from underwater mountain near 'Lost City'
By Stephanie Pappas published
Scientists just pulled the longest hunk of Earth's mantle from beneath the ocean.
Gargantuan waves in Earth's mantle may make continents rise, new study finds
By Tia Ghose published
Dramatic cliffs and high plateaus are caused by the same wave triggered in Earth's middle layer when continents pull apart, a new study finds.
Plate tectonics fired up at least 3 billion years ago, study of ancient rocks in Australia indicates
By Evan Howell published
Researchers have discovered the world's oldest known arc-slicing fault in Australia, intensifying the debate over the origins of plate tectonics.
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