The Brighterside of News on MSN
Why flowering plants survived Earth’s greatest extinction while dinosaurs did not
Sixty-six million years ago, a giant asteroid slammed into Earth and changed life forever. The impact wiped out all non-avian ...
Dinosaurs weren't in decline when an asteroid smashed into Earth and wiped them out, scientists say. Instead, the idea that dinosaur diversity was declining before the asteroid struck 66 million years ...
The discovery of traces of an asteroid in Hokkaido is the first-ever confirmation of such traces in Japan, according to the ...
Nuclear war is much more unpredictable than asteroids, but, unlike the dinosaurs of 66 million years ago, humans can avoid ...
A new study suggests that duplicated genomes gave some flowering plants the genetic flexibility needed to endure Earth’s ...
The asteroid that smacked into our planet about 66 million years ago at the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K/Pg) boundary may have been bad news for dinosaurs, but it was good news for fungi. According to new ...
Police are seeking information about a 16-year-old girl who went missing in Detroit. Detroit police want help finding missing 16-year-old girl Read full article: Detroit police want help finding ...
In school, we learned about the asteroid that wiped out an estimated 76% of all creatures. Scientists now call this the fifth mass extinction. You’re reading that correctly: throughout Earth’s history ...
A provocative new study suggests Dante’s Inferno may have secretly doubled as a giant cosmic impact scenario centuries before ...
A team of Japanese researchers has discovered traces of an asteroid collision in the northernmost prefecture of Hokkaido that may have caused the mass extinction of dinosaurs at the end of the Cretace ...
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