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‘Toxic Soup’ from World's Largest Mass Extinction Led to Similar Event Today
After the End-Permian mass extinction wiped out nearly all life on earth roughly 252 million years ago, it seems that it proliferated today's rivers and lakes with toxic microbial blooms. In a study conducted by international team of researchers, they call this burst in bacterial and algal blooms a 'toxic soup' which sprouts in freshwater ecosystems.
Latest Research Articles
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Bitcoin Transactions Contribute to Alarming E-Waste Crisis, Generating Major Environmental Harm
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Parasitic Bacteria Turns Plants Into 'Zombies,' Helping Protect Disease-Threatened Crops
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Experts Warn of 'Explosions and Toxic Gases' if Lava From Volcanic Eruption in Canary Islands Reach Atlantic Ocean
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Global Reef Systems Affected by Severe Climate Change
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Experts Uncover Surprising Reason Why Primates Still Carry Around Their Infant's Corpse
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Over 36 Countries Assessed, Only One Country Found to have Climate Rating Compatibility
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Ebola Virus Can Stay in Human Survivors and May Trigger Outbreak After Years
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2021 Busy Tropical Season: Tropical Depression Seventeen Intensifies into Tropical Storm Rose
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Deadly Fire Claims the Lives of At Least 75 Animals in a Pet Resort in Central Texas
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European Lakes Have Alarming Concentrations of Microplastic Pollution Than Previously Thought
Unfavorable Weather Worsens Threat that California Wildfires Pose to Giant Sequoia Trees
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Heavy Rainfall Persist in Southeastern US, Increasing Risks of Flash Flood