The algae was buried in sediment beneath the Baltic Sea with no light or oxygen. Researchers have successfully revived algae that remained dormant within sediment at the bottom of the Baltic Sea ...
Supported by By Michael Schwirtz Photographs by James Hill Michael Schwirtz and James Hill spent 14 hours aboard a French naval plane as it patrolled the Baltic Sea, monitored commercial shipping ...
German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said that a Russian ship allegedly fired at a German helicopter in the Baltic Sea.
In a breakthrough study, researchers have successfully revived dormant algae that sank to the bottom of the Baltic Sea nearly 7,000 years ago. The tiny diatom cells, buried in sediment without light ...
For decades the Baltic Sea has served as a delicate buffer zone between a growing number of NATO members and Russia, more recently becoming a new front line for symmetric and asymmetric threats ...
Poland is planning a major investment in Baltic Sea wind power, but the same geopolitical concerns motivating that push for domestic energy sources also pose security challenges. Underwritten ...
Fully active again even after around 7,000 years without light and oxygen in the Baltic Sea sediment: the diatom Skeletonema marinoi. Credit: S. Bolius, IOW. After spending nearly 7,000 years ...
Since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, I have encountered questions asking why Ukraine has not ended the war. Those asking believe that ending the war at any cost would benefit Ukraine. However, ...
Finland’s connections to Europe could be given a boost thanks to a new fixed link across the Baltic Sea between the country and neighbours Sweden and Estonia. A new report published by the ...
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