Global warming is producing a rapid loss of plant species – according to estimates , roughly 600 plant species have died out since 1750 – twice the ...
Climatologists analyze various natural climate data repositories to understand Earth’s past. Glaciers, sediments, and pollen convene to form a kind of “nature’s archive” from which natural scientists ...
The radiocarbon dating of the coal found near the region has suggested the fact that the civilisation is 10,700 years old, thereby suggesting that there was human activity at this place just after the ...
Global warming is producing a rapid loss of plant species—according to estimates, roughly 600 plant species have died out ...
As an archaeologist, you picture yourself traveling to some remote location, digging into the ground, and returning to a lab ...
In the Arizona desert, researchers are uncovering extraordinary details about the peoples who have inhabited this land since ...
Cecilia Blomdahl tells PEOPLE exclusively about her life in Svalbard and what it's like living in the dark 24-7 during Polar ...
Ancient humans living in Europe may have scooped out the brains of their dead enemies and eaten them, a new study suggests.
Historical texts, from official records to personal chronicles, are revealing how 16th-century weather shaped Transylvanian ...
The Little Ice Age was a period of global cooling that began during around 1300 CE and lasted until about 1850. Average ...
Glaciers, sediments, and pollen can be used to reconstruct the climate of the past. Beyond "nature's archive," other sources, ...
Records from 500 years ago document floods, famine and death in 16th century Transylvania due to wild weather swings during the Little Ice Age.