It suggests that the world was previously hit by huge impacts that we may not know about, and the craters left behind might ...
Curtin University researchers have discovered the world's oldest known meteorite impact crater, which could significantly ...
It was a respectable tenure, but the world’s oldest known meteorite site is no longer western Australia’s 2.2 ...
Researchers from Curtin University have found the world’s oldest known meteorite impact crater, hidden within the ancient ...
A new method to detect life in ancient rocks could help analyze Mars samples and determine if life once existed on the red ...
Fossil evidence reveals that palm trees once thrived in the Canadian Arctic, challenging everything we know about Earth's ...
The new crater is located in Western Australia’s Pilbara Craton, a place that has some of the oldest exposed rocks in the ...
“Earthrise” begins with a quotation from William Anders, who, as a member of the first crew to circle the moon, took the ...
Ancient trees like Methuselah and Alerce Milenario serve as living records of the planet's history and climate changes.
The discovery of a 3.47-billion-year-old crater in WA's Pilbara region pushes back the age of the earliest-known impact site on Earth by more than one billion years.
Scientists have revealed that two continent-size regions in Earth's deep mantle have distinctive histories and resulting chemical composition, in contrast to the common assumption they are the same.