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Methane chasers: Hunting a climate-changing gas seeping from Earth’s seafloor
They’ve been called “bubble chasers,” and “seep seekers,” though they sometimes call themselves “flare hunters.” They’re a ...
In the frigid depths of the Greenland Sea, nearly 12,000 feet beneath Arctic ice, scientists uncovered an extraordinary world ...
The Greek goddess Chimera, was a monstrous composition of disparate parts that embodied an ancient fear of females.
Far north in the Fram Strait, scientists from UiT The Arctic University of Norway, working with colleagues including the University of Southampton in the U.K., have identified the deepest known gas ...
Indian Defence Review on MSN
A Rover Robot Discovered a Never-Before-Seen Submerged Volcano in Earth’s Deepest and Oldest Freshwater Lake
Beneath the surface of the world’s deepest lake, scientists have uncovered strange geological structures unlike anything seen ...
Despite crushing pressure, total darkness and near-freezing temperatures, researchers found an underwater world teeming with ...
Far below the waves of the Arctic, in water almost four kilometers deep, scientists have found a new kind of oasis. On the Molloy Ridge in the Greenland Sea, at 3,640 meters below the surface, an ...
A reserve of natural gas bubbling from a cage of ice discovered on the ocean floor to the west of Greenland may be the deepest gas hydrate cold seep on record, and it happens to be teeming with animal ...
11don MSN
Superheated sediments in a submarine pressure cooker—an unexpected source of deep-sea hydrogen
The mid-ocean ridge runs through the oceans like a suture. Where Earth's plates move apart, new oceanic crust is continuously ...
Hit Points on MSN
World’s deepest gas discovery rewrites the playbook on Arctic life
Nearly four kilometers below the surface of the Greenland Sea, scientists have discovered a thriving community of life that ...
Learn more about the Freya Hydrate Mounds, the deepest known methane seep in the Arctic, and the creatures that call it home. At about 11,942 feet (3,640 meters) below the surface of the Greenland Sea ...
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