Greenland crater renewed the debate over an ancient climate mystery0
- Ancient Archeology, From Around the Web
- December 19, 2018
Scientists disagree on what the find means for a controversial comet-impact hypothesis
Scientists disagree on what the find means for a controversial comet-impact hypothesis
Black holes are among the most mysterious places in the universe; locations where the very fabric of space and time are warped so badly that not even light can escape from them.
Ever since Reddy Guaygua was a boy, he dreamt of discovering hidden ruins.
Researchers from RIKEN and JAXA have used observations from the ALMA radio observatory located in northern Chile and managed by an international consortium including the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ) to measure, for the first time, the strength of magnetic fields near two supermassive black holes at the centers of an important type of active galaxies.
The two world powers have reportedly been working together on a series of controversial experiments.
It was New Year’s Day, 1979, when the world awoke to the news that strange lights had been spotted by six people on a plane off the New Zealand’s South Island.
On 1 January 2019 the New Horizons probe will begin transmitting data from Ultima Thule, 4bn miles from Earth in the Kuiper belt. What will it find?
Interbreeding with ancient humans means ancient genetic fragments still shaping heads of some Europeans
An Astrobiology study proposes that an ancient supernova could have exposed Megalodon and other large ocean animals to deadly muon radiation.
The spaceplane reached an altitude of 51.4 miles.