Scientists for the first time have detected a slow slip earthquake in motion during the act of releasing tectonic pressure on a major fault zone at the bottom of the ocean.
articles
Wildfires Threaten Water Quality for Years After They Burn
CIRES-led research used big data to analyze over 500 river basins to create and analyze the first large-scale database.
New Homes for Endangered Skink
Climate change and habitat loss are affecting animal populations around the world and reptiles such as South Australia’s own endangered pygmy bluetongue are susceptible to higher temperatures and declining long-term rainfall trends.
Sizzling Start to Summer
The astronomical start to summer was difficult to ignore for tens of millions of people in the United States in 2025.
Ocean ‘Greening’ at Poles Could Spell Changes for Fisheries
Ocean waters are getting greener at the poles and bluer toward the equator, according to a new study.
Caffeine Could Slow Cellular Ageing: New Research Shows How
A new study from the Cellular Ageing and Senescence laboratory at Queen Mary University of London’s Centre for Molecular Cell Biology, reveals how caffeine —the world’s most popular neuroactive compound—might do more than just wake you up.