It turns out, whale pee is nothing to pooh-pooh. The marine giants’ urine serves a vital role in ecosystems by moving tons of nutrients across vast ocean distances, according to new research.
Whale urine helps move nutrients thousands of miles across the ocean in a “conveyer belt,” according to a new study. Photo from Venti Views, UnSplash It turns out, whale pee is nothing to pooh ...
The concept of thermohaline circulation might sound like a complex term from a science textbook, but it plays a crucial role ...
The company Vesta, formed in 2021, promotes the greenish-hued mineral as a tool to draw down carbon into the ocean and create ...
Scientists are increasingly worried about a potential slowdown of the major Atlantic ocean current. Now we know it would ...
Researchers have taken a close look at the global ocean's great "conveyor belt," and they don't like what they've found. The ...
Hurricane season in the Caribbean means more affordable cruises and fewer crowds – but do the rewards outweigh the risks?
A change in the natural wind system over the Atlantic Ocean due to worsening climate change could lead to increasingly severe winter flooding and storm damage in northwestern Europe, scientists have ...
March 9 (UPI) --Iran, China and Russia will launch a joint military operation Monday called "Security Belt 2025," designed to promote security and trilateral cooperation in the Indian Ocean.
Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. Pink dye is released into Halifax Harbour in Nova Scotia, Canada, as part of a project by the company ...