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For years, scientists have debated whether a giant thick ice shelf once covered the entire Arctic Ocean during the coldest ...
Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUVs) epitomize a revolutionary stride in underwater exploration, seamlessly assuming tasks once exclusive to manned vehicles. Their collaborative prowess within joint ...
An international study has revealed how continental collisions may have supercharged the Earth's richest deposits of copper, ...
Globally, only $1.2 billion annually is going toward ocean protection, less than 10% of what is needed, even when studies show that protecting 30% of the ocean by 2030 could unlock $85 billion ...
Extraction of features from images has been a goal of researchers since the early days of remote sensing. This paper presents a statistical approach to detect dark curvilinear features due to ocean ...
BEIJING, June 13, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — Currently, the world is facing severe climate challenges—frequent extreme weather events and accelerated sea-level rise. Scientific research confirms that excess ...
Ocean acidity levels became intolerable and led to more than half of all marine life dying out. 66 million years later, it’s happening again. This time, there is no asteroid—just us humans.
A new assessment finds that the world’s oceans crossed the safe threshold for acidification in 2020, breaching a key planetary boundary and posing serious threats to marine life. Ocean ...
Another is ocean acidification, also caused by burning fossil fuels. In 2023, researchers determined that six of these boundaries had already been crossed. The new research adds a worrying seventh.
Ocean acidification crosses “planetary boundaries” Crisis facing the world's marine ecosystems is getting worse. Georgiana Gustin, Inside Climate News – Jun 10, 2025 6:54 AM | 120 ...
As the United Nations Ocean Conference opened this week in Nice, France, a major scientific report revealed that one of Earth’s planetary boundaries—ocean acidification—has already been crossed. The ...