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Supervolcanic Explosions 75,000 Years Ago Cause Significant Drop in Ozone Levels
When the volcanic ash and gases of the Toba Supervolcano exploded into the atmosphere, it partially blocked the sunlight and reduced the world's temperature down to 3.5 degrees, allowing disruption and famine in the ecosystem. A study suggests that the supereruption had not just caused attenuation of visible sunlight and cooling deceleration of the water cycle, but it also depleted the Earth's ozone layer.
Latest Research Articles
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Woman at Risk of Being Blind After Contracting Rare Cowpox Virus From Pet Cat
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US Pledges to Protect Territory of Endangered Humback Whales in Pacific Ocean
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Octopus Vision Helps Optometrists Fight Incurable Human Sight Loss
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Israeli Archaeologists Accidentally Broke a 1,000-year-old Egg They Discovered!
"Blinking Giant" Star Spotted by Astronomers Near the Center of the Milky Way Galaxy
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Scientists are Unlocking the Secrets of Four-Tipped Penis Echidnas
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Scientists Offers a Solution in Combatting Ocean Pollution
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Meteorologists: US Northern Plains States Prepare For Next Violent Storms
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Beachgoers Reported Being Stung by Hundreds of Jellyfish Washed Ashore in Southend
11 Dead as 3-Storey Building Collapsed During Monsoon Flashfloods in India
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Nile Crocodile Named 'Bin Laden' Terrorizes Village, Eating 80 Locals
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2 Fledgling Hurricanes in Atlantic are Forming as Hurricane Season Begins