The discovery of a 3.47-billion-year-old crater in WA's Pilbara region pushes back the age of the earliest-known impact site on Earth by more than one billion years.
Seasoned conservator Ivan Myjer is replacing pieces of San Antonio's "major achievement" in historic construction.
The find could hold implications for understanding the origin of life here on Earth.
Johnson reports the crater can be seen today only in a 35-mile wide dome that marks exactly where the asteroid impacted.
Guillermo Vieiro was 44 when he died in 1985 while descending Argentina's Tupungato lava dome, one of the highest peaks in ...
The crater is located in the North Pole Dome, a region in Pilbara ... And this was not an event without consequences: it may have permanently altered Earth’s geology. Shatter cones within the ...
The geology of this new target is interpreted as Katangan sediments onlapping onto older basement lithologies of the Kazhiba Dome, itself interpreted from geophysics as an unexposed, shallow, basement ...
Canberra is buzzing! Whether you're a night owl, an early bird, a culture vulture, or a foodie, we've rounded up the best ...
This week, geologists announced they discovered the world's oldest known impact crater. It's in Western Australia's ancient ...
In the new study, published online Jan. 19 in the journal Marine Geology, researchers analyzed an extensive ... The black ...