Black Hole Simulations Show That Just Three Particles Can Break Time Symmetry0
- Earth Mysteries
- March 26, 2020
Time has a precise direction.
Time has a precise direction.
Sasquatch. Bigfoot. Yeti. There are many monikers for the large and mysterious upright bi-pedal mammal that has allegedly roamed the world’s forests for hundreds of years. A long-told legend in many cultures: sightings of the creature have been reported from the Himalayas to the woods of Central Oregon. Although no definitive proof exists, reports of human encounters keep piling up.
In northwestern Wyoming, in the center of Yellowstone National Park, a bubbling caldera is the scar of a 640,000-year-old, gargantuan volcanic eruption.
A curious set of photographs have emerged showing an alleged Sasquatch looking in through a man’s window.
Once upon a time, reaching the highest peak on Earth was considered a feat achievable only by a select few.
New research lends credence to an unorthodox retelling of the story of early Earth that was first proposed by a geophysicist at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, California.
It keeps breaking astronomer’s models of how stars are supposed to act.
New evidence reignites a longstanding debate about how the sea reconnected with the ocean.
The recent “Bigfoot” sighting on Sherman Pass has officially been debunked, but you can still believe if you’d like.
Molten silicate might solve a long-standing magnetic mystery