The Brighterside of News on MSN
Mercury is not dead: Bright streaks reveal ongoing activity
For many years, scientists viewed Mercury as a world that no longer had an active geological history. The planet appears to be almost completely uniform, dry, barren, and mostly unchanged for the past ...
Lineae on other planets are thought to erode quickly, so the study authors suspect that the streaks are still forming and ...
A trio of ancient mesas is rewriting what we know about wind, sand, and deep-time geology, captured in stunning detail from space.
This Production Update reports operational progress since April 2025, following bridge loan funding provided by ASP Isotopes Inc. (“ASPI”) (prior ...
Wellbeing Whisper on MSN
Hidden plate fragments off Northern California may widen the earthquake danger zone
What appears to be such a pleasant meeting-place of the well-known rifts, in the Northern part of California, is proving to ...
THIS ANNOUNCEMENT AND THE INFORMATION CONTAINED HEREIN IS RESTRICTED AND IS NOT FOR RELEASE, PUBLICATION OR DISTRIBUTION, IN WHOLE OR IN PART, ...
The North American craton actually dips near the Rockies rather than forming a sharp vertical step as previously believed.
Accuracy is crucial for predicting earthquakes, and that's where this study will be most useful. Both the San Andreas fault ...
WRAL meteorologists Elizabeth Gardner and Grant Skinner break down the ingredients of predictive weather models, explaining ...
New research uses tiny mineral clues to show people moved Stonehenge stones, not glaciers, changing how we view ancient engineering.
New research reveals that Central Asia’s rugged terrain was molded by the vanished Tethys Ocean, millions of years before the Himalayas even rose.
By tracking swarms of very small earthquakes, seismologists are getting a new picture of the complex region where the San ...
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