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Wildlife Photographer Captures First Underwater Images of One of the Rarest Seals In the World
A wildlife photographer has captured what are believed to be the first underwater images of the rare, elusive Ross seal.
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Submarine vanishes beneath Antarctic ice after uncovering mysterious hidden structures scientists can’t explain
The frozen edges of Antarctica are less stable than they appear. Beneath the wide, seemingly immovable shelves of ice, the ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Earthquakes Deep Below Antarctic Waters Seem to Have Surprising Effects on Life at the Surface
Shaking caused by quakes may cause ocean floor vents to release more nutrients, triggering blooms in plant-like organisms ...
Underwater filmmaker, photographer and Scubaverse Underwater Photography Team member Jacob Guy has embarked on a rare ...
The deal is done for the new underwater vehicle that will replace Ran, the submarine that was lost under a glacier in Antarctica in 2024. A large donation means that researchers at the University of ...
The Cool Down on MSN
Scientists issue warning over troubling discovery on Antarctic expedition: 'This mission was the first of its kind'
Ultimately, researchers determined that prior climate models omitted key features and underestimated the extent to which warm ...
(CNN) — Swirling underwater “storms” are aggressively melting the ice shelves of two vital Antarctic glaciers, with potentially “far-reaching implications” for global sea level rise, according to a ...
In remote West Antarctica, two glaciers are melting. The Thwaites and Pine Island glaciers account for more than a third of the total ice loss in Antarctica. Thwaites, roughly the size of Florida, is ...
No audio available for this content. Canadian scientists recently led their first Antarctic research expedition, using Montreal-made Arrow Gold+ GNSS technology for precise location data in remote and ...
Deep beneath the thick layer of million-year-old ice, something is lurking quietly, waiting to rip through the rigid ice ...
Striations, grooves, and mud deposits from anchor retrieval were visible in the substrate of the ocean floor. At the disturbed sites, little to no marine life was present. Credit: Matt Mulrennan / ...
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