News

Imagine if Earth's history had a mystery novel, and one of its biggest unsolved puzzles was: Where did all the nitrogen go?
Scientists have uncovered that the continental divide between South America and Africa 135 million years ago unleashed 16 ...
A multidisciplinary synthesis of the Campi Flegrei, Italy volcanic setting highlights the importance of sub-caldera layering ...
A seismic swarm at Laguna del Maule in central Chile, causing 160 low-magnitude quakes in just two hours, has heightened alertness among authorities and locals. Although the volcanic activity suggests ...
UK: Work has begun to build a stop and 100-space park and ride facility at Magna on the Supertram tram-train route from ...
A team led by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), presents new details of an oceanic transform fault at the ...
Scientists with NASA’s Perseverance rover are exploring what they consider a veritable Martian cornucopia full of intriguing rocky outcrops on the rim of Jezero Crater. Studying rocks, boulders, and ...
The depths, longevity, and potential to generate silicic compositions of magma chambers are linked to crustal temperature, which varies across Mars and over its geological history.
Io is an incredibly active and extreme place, with glistening lava lakes and volcanic eruptions shooting sulfur and magma to ...
The split between South America and Africa 135 million years ago was a fiery affair, new research finds. The continental breakup spewed over 3.8 million cubic miles (16 million cubic kilometers) of ...
Modern continental rocks carry chemical signatures from the very start of our planet's history, challenging current theories about plate tectonics.
New Zealand's North Island features a number of geothermal systems, several of which are used to generate some 1,000 ...