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Top Environment News -- ScienceDaily
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A hidden network of earthquake faults running beneath Seattle may be far more active than scientists realized. New research reveals that smaller "secondary" faults in the Seattle Fault Zone appear to rupture roughly every 350 years -- much more often ...
Scientists have uncovered remarkable new details about Bronze Age life in Central Europe by studying rare burials untouched by cremation. The research reveals communities experimenting with new foods, burial rituals, and cultural connections while .. ...
Antarctica's Hektoria Glacier collapsed with shocking speed, retreating 15 miles in only 15 months and setting a modern record for grounded ice loss. Scientists say warming conditions and ocean-driven instability turned the glacier from seemingly ...
A random photo snapped in the Australian outback has led to the rediscovery of a plant thought extinct for nearly 60 years -- proving that ordinary people with smartphones are quietly transforming science. After bird bander Aaron Bean uploaded ...
A new study suggests humans became overwhelmingly right-handed because of two major evolutionary shifts: walking on two legs and developing much larger brains. Researchers found that as human ancestors evolved, their right-hand preference steadily .. ...
Scientists have uncovered evidence that the vanished Tethys Ocean may have sculpted Central Asia's mountainous landscape during the dinosaur era. Using decades of geological data, researchers found that distant tectonic activity linked to the ancient ...
A spectacular dinosaur discovery in Spain is giving scientists a rare new look inside the world of stegosaurs. Paleontologists uncovered the best-preserved stegosaur skull ever found in Europe, belonging to the iconic plated dinosaur Dacentrurus ...
A long-lost manuscript discovered in Rome has revealed one of the oldest surviving versions of the very first known poem written in English. Hidden for decades and once believed lost, the 1,200-year-old manuscript contains Caedmon's Hymn -- a nine .. ...
A stunning fossil discovery in Ethiopia shows that early Homo and a previously unknown Australopithecus species lived together around 2.6 to 2.8 million years ago. The find overturns the classic "ape-to-human" progression and paints human evolution . ...
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