Scientists Unveil How Earth's Pacific Plates Collapsed Subduction is a process where one tectonic plate slides underneath another plate. Researchers from the University of Southampton discovered that not all tectonic plates stay strong when they go under, debunking many collective beliefs. by Katherine Derla
Science New Study Says 'Curtain Of Fire' Killed The Dinosaurs: Other Possible Causes Of The Animals' Extinction by Katrina Pascual
Science 150-Million-Year-Old Skeleton Of Teenage Allosaurus Dinosaur For Sale At Auction by Ted Ranosa
Science DNA Analysis Of Ancient Skeletons Reveals First Londoners Were Multi-Ethnic Mix by Alyssa Navarro
Science Einstein’s ‘Spooky Action At A Distance’ Is Real: More Researchers Prove Quantum Entanglement by Kyle Nofuente
Science Buglife Charity Shares Extreme Close-Ups Of Bugs And Insects Living In Your House This Winter by Katrina Pascual
Science Deforestation Poses Extinction Threats To More Than Half Of Amazon Tree Species: Study by Rhodi Lee
Science Fossilized Forest Discovered In Norway Triggered Dramatic Climate Change 380 Million Years Ago by Katrina Pascual
Science Archaeologists Unearth Lost Island In The Aegean Where Athenians, Spartans Fought In Battle Of Arginusae by Rina Marie Doctor
Science Genome Sequencing Reveals Slimy Seabed Worms Share 70 Percent Of Human Genes by Rina Marie Doctor
Science Sea Level Rise Due To Melting Antarctic Ice Sheet Poses Less Threat Than Feared: Study by Julienne Roman
Science Quantum Computers Not Far Away As Researchers Write First Quantum Code On Silicon Chip by Quinten Plummer
Science Denisovans Were More Genetically Diverse Than Neanderthals, DNA From Tooth Fossil Reveals by Julienne Roman
Science Protein Compass May Explain How Animals Detect Magnetic Fields And Find Their Way Home by Katrina Pascual
Science Supergene Turns Male Ruffs Into Cross-Dressers That Steal Mates From Other Birds by Rina Marie Doctor
Science Half The Natural History Specimens In The Word's Museums May Be Misnamed, Scientists Say by Jim Algar
Science Great Tits Would Rather Go Hungry Than Leave Their Mates: Other Animals With Remarkable ‘Love’ Bonds by Katherine Derla