Scientists studying the formation of the sea floor thousands of feet below the surface have a new theory for why there are so many holes and collapsed pits on the ocean bottom. Scientists studying the ...
Like a stream of air shooting out of an airplane's broken window to relieve cabin pressure, scientists at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego say lava formations in eastern Oregon are ...
BUFFALO, N.Y. — Rocky pillars dotting Iceland’s Skaelingar valley were projectiles tossed into the fields by warring trolls. That, at least, is the tale that University at Buffalo geologist Tracy ...
Puna (HawaiiNewsNow) - Jason Twillman is a farmer in a section of Puna called Noni Farms. But he’s not doing much farming these days. Instead, he’s found a new purpose — finding a way to help his ...
Editor’s note • This article is part of 150 Things To Do, a reporting project and newsletter exploring the best that Utah has to offer. Click here to sign up for the 150 Things weekly newsletter. Much ...
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) - A photographer captured what looks like a movie monster come to life at the summit of Kilauea last month. Far from the usual Madam Pele sighting — Photographer Warren Fintz ...
Scientists studying the formation of the sea floor thousands of feet below the surface have a new theory for why there are so many holes and collapsed pits on the ocean bottom. In a recent article in ...
Rocky pillars dotting Iceland's Skaelingar valley were projectiles tossed into the fields by warring trolls. That, at least, is the tale that University at Buffalo geologist Tracy Gregg heard from a ...
Like a stream of air shooting out of an airplane's broken window to relieve cabin pressure, scientists at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego say lava formations in eastern Oregon are ...
"Formations like the ones we see in Iceland are common in the ocean under two miles of water, where there's so much pressure that there's no explosion," she said. "They've never been described on land ...
Rocky pillars dotting Iceland’s Skaelingar valley were projectiles tossed into the fields by warring trolls. That, at least, is the tale that UB geologist Tracy Gregg heard from a tour guide and local ...