Fossilized tracks on Italy’s Monte Conero could reveal turtles or marine reptiles fleeing a massive earthquake millions of ...
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What survived 12,000 feet below the sea

When Titanic was discovered in 1985, the wreck looked more like an aircraft crash than a shipwreck. Scattered across miles of seabed were chandeliers, fine woodwork, tiles, and personal belongings.
In August 1979, two American saturation divers were working 522 feet below the North Sea when their diving bell detached from its lift wire and fell to the seabed. With no hot water and eventually no ...
History was unmade last year, as engineers began the massive project of ripping the first-ever transoceanic fiber-optic cable from the ocean floor. Just don’t mention sharks.
Sri Lanka needs to build awareness, effective policies and encourage regional multilateral frameworks to develop a multi-pronged approach to secure its national interest and safeguard regional ...
Dolphins also have a habit of flinging octopuses. This has a practical benefit of killing the octopus before the dolphin tries to eat it, thus avoiding the danger of being choked by hundreds of ...
A marine researcher says he has video evidence of the first recorded shark in the Antarctic Ocean. Alan Jamieson says many ...
An Australian breakthrough is set to open a new frontier for construction underwater, with Melbourne -based company Luyten 3D unveiling world-leading technology expected to have a big impact on our ...
Analysis: Control of undersea fibre-optic cables, the arteries of the global internet, has become the new frontline in the ...
As you spirit across ancient seabed among the ghosts of cruising sharks and skittering blue crabs you’ll pass the Edisto Island Presbyterian Church. People have been laid to rest in the churchyard ...
Join our mercenary team: high-risk, low-benefit positions available! Defend cargo trains in this Turn-Based Tower Defense meets Reverse Bullet Hell. Deploy units, merge them to create powerful new ...
Deep below Antarctic ice, a chance encounter challenges a long-held rule about where sharks can and cannot survive.