The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Scientists discover skyscraper-sized underwater waves beneath Greenland that speed up glacier melt
Massive underwater waves triggered by falling icebergs are playing a bigger role in Greenland’s ice loss than scientists once ...
The phenomenon isn't a new one, but scientists have only recently come up with a convincing explanation for why it happens.
From freshwater providers to cultural touchstones, a look at the many changing identities of glaciers.
Modern Engineering Marvels on MSN
Red water broke through Antarctic ice and the glacier moved
Antarctica sometimes reveals its hidden plumbing in dramatic color. At Taylor Glacier in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, a rust-red seep known as Blood Falls has puzzled observers since 1911. The spectacle ...
A researcher from Italy is missing after he fell into a stream on Alaska’s Mendenhall Glacier, authorities said. The Alaska Department of Public Safety (DPS) said that on Tuesday, Sept. 2, around 1:45 ...
Beneath Taylor Glacier, several kilometres away from where Blood Falls emerges, there is a subglacial pool. It formed millions of years ago below hundreds of metres of ice. The water there has very ...
4don MSN
Meet the scientist heading to Greenland’s fjord glaciers to understand their ‘climate tipping point’
Researchers will also trial a prototype ‘Early Warning System’ for glacier change in Greenland, as ice melt continues to ...
6don MSN
A race against time to save Alpine ice cores that record medieval mining, fires, and volcanoes
Ice cores taken from glaciers reveal the air pollution of the past, using atmospheric particles incorporated in snow that ...
Glacier ice contains valuable information about the climates of the past. Researchers are scrambling to study it before it's too late.
The Blood Falls is the result of a complicated interaction in which overlying ice, underlying rock, and an ancient lake bed ...
Melting glaciers and ice sheets are raising sea levels while the Arctic is poised to log one of its worst winters on record.
Erin Pettit and researchers at Oregon State University were set to find out. They’ve been studying melting glaciers by dropping hydrophones — specialized underwater microphones — into the water near ...
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