Scientists Record the Thunderous Call of the Loudest Known Fish0
- Earth Mysteries, From Around the Web
- December 23, 2017
The Gulf corvina’s collective mating call is so powerful that it can damage the hearing of sea lions and dolphins.
The Gulf corvina’s collective mating call is so powerful that it can damage the hearing of sea lions and dolphins.
Stones like emeralds, sapphires and rubies are more than just financially valuable or aesthetically valued. Each one is a glittering clue to the extreme physical, chemical and tectonic forces at work deep underground
Using x-ray lasers, researchers at Stockholm University have been able to map out how water fluctuates between two different states when it is cooled. At -44°C these fluctuations reach a maximum pointing to the fact that water can exist as two different distinct liquids. The findings will be published in the journal Science.
If ancient mankind had access to advanced technology thousands of years ago, wouldn’t we find traces of such technology today? The structures at Sacsayhuaman, Ollantaytambo, Puma Punku and many others display INCREDIBLE FEATURES: perfectly shaped corners, precision cuts that are reminiscent of modern day laser tools, and such perfection among the stones fitted together in such a way that not a single sheet of paper could fit in between them.
‘It was the opposite of what I was expecting we might see’
Growing human body parts in labs sounds like a myth, but scientists are making it a reality.
Which one will win? We’ll find out in 2019.
A behind-the-scenes look at harvest time, soil drainage, and Pleistocene megafauna.
On Oct. 10, 2015, astronomers in Hawaii made a spooky discovery: a giant asteroid between 625 and 700 meters zipping through space, that at certain angles looks uncannily like a human skull.
When searching for life, scientists first look for an element key to sustaining it: fresh water.