As humans, we crave stability because it fosters a sense of security. Uncertainty shakes our assumptions and makes us ...
An earthquake was felt in part of north-west England on Wednesday night. The 3.3-magnitude earthquake was recorded shortly ...
New drilling results from the South Atlantic have uncovered ancient lava rubble that stores far more CO2 than expected, ...
Priceless rock extracted from Scotland's legendary Great Glen Fault could help answer 'fundamental questions about the ...
Human activity can cause “healed” faults to release their stored strength, triggering unexpected quakes in tectonically stable regions.
As AI investment surges and capital floods into data centers and infrastructure, fault lines are forming beneath the surface ...
Long before Mars turned into the frozen desert you see today, water shaped its surface in dramatic ways. Rivers cut through ...
TOURISTS at a British holiday hotspot have been put on alert as an earthquake struck a popular resort. Holidaymakers on the ...
With Trump’s budget knife still poised over NOAA’s climate research operations, international researchers see a reduced role ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Human-caused quakes are real and here’s why stable regions snap
Earthquakes are often treated as acts of nature that strike without warning along famous plate boundaries, yet a growing body ...
By trapping huge amounts of water on land, big dams built by humans have slightly changed how Earth spins and where its poles ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Vast water reservoir may sit deep beneath Earth’s crust
Far below the familiar blue of the surface oceans, geophysicists are piecing together evidence for a vast, hidden reservoir ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results