Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Researchers Discover “Death Ball” Sponge and Dozens of Other Bizarre Deep-Sea Creatures in the Southern Ocean
Researchers have discovered 30 previously unknown deep-sea species in the remote ocean surrounding Antarctica, they announced ...
Green Matters on MSN
‘Death Ball Sponge’ and ‘Zombie Worms’ — Researchers Find Never-Before-Seen Species in Southern Ocean
A total of thirty new creatures were discovered during the expedition, scouring seafloor habitats near Montagu and Saunders ...
The ocean is home to some sea creatures that will likely give you a fright. Much of the ocean's marine life is yet to be discovered, with scientists estimating that a whopping 91% of ocean species ...
Scientists are revolutionizing how new marine species are described through the Ocean Species Discoveries initiative. Using advanced lab techniques, researchers recently unveiled 14 new species from ...
Going to the beach in Northern California is a little more, let’s say, “interesting” this spring, as the sand in many places has been replaced with squishy, electric-blue carpets of jellylike sea ...
Documentation provides one of the most detailed observations of seafloor biodiversity and habitats at these depths ...
NEW YORK (AP) — An underwater voyage has revealed a network of creatures thriving at the bottom of deep-sea ocean trenches. In these extreme environments, the crushing pressure, scant food and lack of ...
The aquariums said its aerial survey team spotted three True’s beaked whales, a species “rarely seen at the surface,” while above the Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Marine National Monument off the ...
Clay weighs down carbon and other materials, helping it sink deeper into the ocean. Video courtesy of Dartmouth College. In 2016, Dartmouth professor Mukul Sharma was thinking that bringing down ...
Oceanographic magazine reported this week on new research focused on a tiny crustacean called Corophium volutator. This species is important to food webs in estuaries — where rivers meet the sea — but ...
Here on the surface at Averill Park, children play on the vibrant green hills. Books are open. Lunches are enjoyed. But Rachel — an 18-foot-diameter tunneling machine — awaits the signal to resume ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results