Researchers have successfully revived dormant algae that sank to the bottom of the Baltic Sea nearly 7,000 years ago.
A lightning strike on an oil tank caused a large fire west of Baton Rouge, Louisiana. A fire official says the first crews at ...
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IFLScience on MSNPrehistoric Algae Dormant For 7,000 Years Set Record For Longest ResurrectionSediments at the bottom of the Baltic Sea cut anything buried in them off from sunlight and oxygen. That’s fatal to many ...
Two-thirds of the Panama Canal watershed’s freshwater goes to operate the locks. The country plans to build another reservoir ...
Countries along the eastern coast of the Baltic Sea, including Estonia, may experience more flooding in the future.
After a series of suspicious cable cuttings feared to be Russian sabotage, NATO began a new mission called Baltic Sentry to patrol the Baltic Sea. Michael Schwirtz, an investigative reporter with the ...
The U.S. Army has confirmed the deaths of three of the four soldiers who went missing during a training exercise in Lithuania ...
Baltic Sentry mission taps ships, planes and drones to police one of the world’s busiest waterways.
One of the ocean currents in the Arctic Ocean is at risk of disappearing this century because of climate change, according to a new study. As a result, the North Atlantic could be flooded with ...
After spending nearly 7,000 years buried deep in the mud of the Baltic Sea without light or oxygen, tiny algae have come back ...
A team from the Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research Warnemünde (IOW) has revived algae that lay dormant in Baltic Sea sediment for nearly 7,000 years.
A research team led by the Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research Warnemünde (IOW) was able to revive dormant stages of ...
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