Projections of our future under climate change paint a picture of extreme weather and acidified oceans, a world many of today’s animals — including humans — may struggle, or fail, to survive.
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Back to the Miocene: What the climate 13.8 million years ago could tell us about our future worldProjections of our future under climate change paint a picture of extreme weather and acidified oceans, a world many of today’s animals — including humans — may struggle, or fail, to survive.
Millions of years ago, our Solar System sailed through the Orion Complex, part of the vast Radcliffe Wave structure. This ...
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New Scientist on MSNThe solar system was once engulfed by a vast wave of gas and dustThe stars as seen from Earth would have looked dimmer 14 million years ago, as the solar system was in the middle of passing through clouds of dust and gas ...
Our Solar System is in motion and cruises at about 200 kilometres per second relative to the center of the Milky Way.
Earth may have cooled during a close encounter with dense star clouds. Interstellar dust from the Orion region might have shaped our ancient climate.
In ancient China, spring rains were called "as precious as oil" for their vital role in nature's spring revival. Today, a ...
Millions of years ago, our Solar System traveled through a densely populated galactic region and was exposed to increased interstellar dust.
Impressively, the AHP is just the most recent of hundreds of earlier humid events spanning as far back as the Miocene (9 million years ago) and likely much earlier. The Earth's axial rotation is ...
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