New research reveals how ocean viruses burst algae cells, fueling a subsurface oxygen band through rapid microbial recycling.
New research shows ancient tropical oceans once held more oxygen than cooler regions, reshaping where early life could survive and evolve.
Blue blood may look alien, but it’s one of evolution’s most elegant solutions to life in extreme environments. Here’s how evolution rewrote the rules of oxygen transport.
Morning Overview on MSNOpinion
Russia finds lost Soviet nuclear graveyard under Arctic Ocean
As Arctic ice thins and shipping lanes open, Russia has stumbled on a chilling legacy of the Cold War: a long-lost Soviet ...
For just £4 you can take a supervised cold-water dip in this gorgeous reservoir ...
Wildlife encounters have a unique power to reshape how people see the world and their place within it. Observing animals in ...
The 55,000 hectares of posidonia meadows around the Balearics absorb an estimated seven per cent of the archipelago’s annual ...
Game Rant on MSN
Tides of Tomorrow Hands-On Preview
Game Rant went hands on with Tides of Tomorrow to see how its asynchronous multiplayer lets players shape stories for those ...
Traveling In Focus on MSN
14 reasons the Solomon Islands might be the South Pacific’s most underrated escape
In the far reaches of the Pacific, scattered east of Papua New Guinea, lies an archipelago that ...
Amangati will take to the azure Mediterranean waters from spring 2027, with itineraries covering the likes of the French ...
Georgia offers some of the most breathtaking scenery in the Southeast, and you don't need to be an experienced hiker to enjoy ...
The 2026 Olympics roster selections reinforce what we know about this Boston Bruins team: the top-end talent is elite.
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