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Antarctica: Facts about the southernmost continent
By Nola Taylor Redd last updated
Antarctica is the coldest, windiest, and driest continent. Because so little moisture falls as rain or snow, Antarctica is classified as a desert.

'Quiet Chernobyl' changed Earth's surface so much the planet's mantle is still moving 80 years later
By Sascha Pare published
The land beneath the former Aral Sea in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan is rising and will continue to do so for many decades. Now, scientists have an explanation that involves the sea drying up.

An ocean of magma formed early in Earth's history and it may still influence our planet today, study finds
By Stephanie Pappas published
Remnants of a liquid layer of magma near Earth's core, formed in the first few hundred million years of the planet's history, may still persist today as odd anomalies in the mantle.

Crop circles surround Iraq's multicolored 'Sea of Salt' after years of drought
By Harry Baker published
Earth from space This 2024 astronaut photo shows the striking colors of Iraq's Razazah Lake, surrounded by a host of strangely circular fields.

Climate change: Facts about our warming planet
By Stephanie Pappas, Marilyn Perkins published
Discover important facts about what climate change is, what's causing it, and what we can do to stop it.

The Earth's oceans used to be green — and could one day turn purple, scientists say
By Cédric M. John published
Earth's oceans could one day turn purple.

Study reveals 'flawed argument' in debate over when plate tectonics began
By Stephanie Pappas published
You don't need plate tectonics to get continental crust that looks modern, a new study finds.

La Niña finished after just a few months
By Patrick Pester published
The La Niña weather pattern ended last month as Pacific Ocean temperatures rose and the El Niño Southern Oscillation cycle entered a neutral state, according to the NOAA.

Wilkes Land crater: The giant hole in East Antarctica's gravitational field likely caused by a meteorite
By Sascha Pare published
Researchers have proposed many origins for a gravity anomaly in Wilkes Land, East Antarctica, but the latest evidence suggests the subglacial hole is an impact crater measuring 315 miles across.

Killer Australian fungus can gobble up widespread, pesticide-resistant armyworm from the inside
By Olivia Ferrari published
Fall armyworms have spread throughout the world, destroying crops and evolving insecticide resistance. New research in Australia suggests fungi that attack the worms could be a promising pest control method.
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