IFLScience on MSN
Watch a giant phantom jellyfish dancing, thanks to deep-sea explorers who found over 25 new species
The Schmidt Ocean Institute’s R/V Falkor (too) has been at it again, with ROV SuBastian diving along the coast of Argentina ...
Off the volcanic ridges of the Eastern Pacific, deep beneath the surface where sunlight never reaches, a team of researchers ...
Learn how six months of underwater recordings uncovered new details about how beaked whales hunt near the ocean bottom.
Scientists have captured a rare view of one of the ocean's least understood whales—without ever seeing it. By listening to ...
A dome-fronted submersible sinks beneath the waves off Indonesia, heading down nearly 1,000 metres in search of new species, ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Divers discover hundreds of new species 4,000 meters below the Pacific
A new international study has uncovered hundreds of previously unknown species living deep beneath the Pacific Ocean, shining ...
COLUMBIA, S.C. (WIS) - The surface of the Earth is about two-thirds water, but how much of the world’s deep seas do you think we’ve explored? Dr. Katy Croff Bell founded the Ocean Discovery League and ...
Dumbo octopuses, like the Opisthoteuthis agassizii seen here during a 2019 dive, are the deepest-living group of octopuses known. NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration and Research, 2019 Southeastern U.S.
Giant oceanic manta ray (Mobula birostris) and scuba diver in San Benedicto Island, Revillagigedo, Mexico. (Photo by: Luis Javier Sandoval/VWPics/Universal Images Group via Getty Images) The first ...
Being land mammals, we’ve known for a while that Earth’s surface is about two-thirds covered in water, but how much of the world’s deep seas do you think we’ve explored? As she explains, “We hear, ‘We ...
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