Environment
-
Microbe May Have Caused Permian Extinction, Scientist Says
A scientist suggests that a microbe may have caused the Permian extinction, which killed 90 percent of the Earth's species around 251 million years ago.
Latest Research Articles
-
Australia Plans to Drill 2,000-Year-Old Ice Core in Antarctica
-
Isolated Microbe in South Africa Appears in California's Death Valley
-
Cloud Forest Trees Drink Water Using Leaves
-
Genome of Conifers Remains Stable Over Last 100 Million Years
-
Explorers Find Historic Camp Site on Antarctica
-
New Study Sheds Light on Diversity of Arthropods in Panama Rainforest
-
Mali's Gourma Elephants Cover Largest Migration Range
-
Mega Drought Triggered the Collapse of Ancient Aboriginal Society in Australia
-
Pre-Hatching Environment Influences Lateralization in Cuttlefish
-
Nutrients From Fish Help Marine Organisms Thrive
-
Scientists Find Origin of Jersey Red Squirrels
-
Asteroid Strike that Killed Dinosaurs Wiped Out Snakes and Lizards