Sixty-six million years ago, an asteroid or comet about 10 miles (14 kilometers) wide smashed into Earth. It struck what is now Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula, which was then lying at the bottom of a shallow sea.
articles
Loss of Ancient Grazers Triggered a Global Rise in Fires
From 50,000 years to 6,000 years ago, many of the world’s largest animals, including such iconic grassland grazers as the woolly mammoth, giant bison, and ancient horses, went extinct.
Climate Change Challenge to Ancient Sites
From ancient sites in Eastern Europe and North America to the Philippines, Australia’s oldest Indigenous rock art and “drowning islands” in the Pacific, climate change is impacting important archaeological sites around the world.
Pathway for ‘Green Ammonia’ Opens in New Study
An experimental and computational study in Nature Catalysis shows promise for new class of catalysts producing ammonia under mild conditions.
New Demonstration Plant at AU Foulum May Significantly Reduce Carbon Emissions From Methanol Production
In collaboration with Haldor Topsøe, Aarhus University has launched a new demonstration plant to produce sustainable methanol from biogas.
Electrification Will Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions
The global wind and energy sector is currently gathered in Copenhagen for the WindEurope Electric City 2021 event, and as an important player in this field of research, DTU is also taking part.