A massive meteorite impact 3.26 billion years ago could have helped boost early microbial life by releasing nutrients into ...
Harvard researchers found that when a meteorite nicknamed S2 paid a visit to our planet 3 billion years ago, it may have ...
Along with bringing resources to a planet, meteors could also help shape environments to be more habitable.
Did a massive meteorite that struck Earth over three billion years ago give microscopic life the spark it needed to thrive? A ...
The mammoth S2 meteorite, discovered in 2014, is believed to have caused a tsunami larger than any other known in Earth’s ...
A giant meteorite that struck Earth 3.26 billion years ago may have functioned as a 'fertilizer bomb,' aiding early life ...
This is an interesting spin on the famous iodine clock reaction. Instead of a color change, there is a rapid formation of ...
A formation known as the Barberton Greenstone Belt in South Africa contains evidence of a giant impact that shook Earth 3.26 ...
The first person to grasp the marketing potential of the unicorn seems to have been King James I of Scotland.
A giant meteorite, the size of four Mount Everests, is thought to have crashed into Earth around 3.26 billion years ago and ...
Massive impacts had a silver lining for life. Billions of years ago, long before life as we know it emerged, meteorites ...