An irreversible shift in the chemical makeup of the Arctic Ocean driven by climate change is disrupting the region's food ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Saltwater crocodiles just got caught crossing 3,000 kilometers of open Indian Ocean — DNA from museum specimens cracked a 250-year mystery of the Seychelles’ vanished crocs
Somewhere around 1770, French colonists arrived on the Seychelles and found crocodiles waiting on the beaches. Within a few decades, every last one was dead. The skins and skulls ended up in European ...
Scientists found evidence that a profound change in the Antarctic Ocean followed the weakening of the Atlantic.
Scientists are increasingly concerned that marine heatwaves in the Pacific Ocean will fuel a “super” or “Godzilla” El Niño, disrupting fisheries and ecosystems, and intensifying global climate impacts ...
The Ocean Census project says scientists have discovered 1,121 previously unknown species in a single year. The rush is on to save them as risks to the world’s oceans multiply ...
Over the course of 13 expeditions and other efforts between mid-2025 and mid-2026, scientists found hundreds of previously ...
The desert floor in Ethiopia looks fixed and ancient, but it is moving. Across the Afar region and down the East African Rift ...
Bright Side on MSN
Scientists discover the ocean is experiencing mysterious blackouts — what’s behind it?
The ocean is facing unexplained phenomena known as 'blackouts.' What could be causing these intriguing occurrences beneath the surface? Join us as we dive into the mysteries of our oceans and uncover ...
Fourteen world leaders ask an international group of researchers where next for the ocean economy. This collection delivers some of the answers. The world is gearing up to grow ever more reliant on ...
2don MSNOpinion
A New Wave of Investment Sees Profit in Ocean Conservation
A growing ecosystem of companies is seeing the benefit in protecting the seas.
Opinion
1monon MSNOpinion
Contributor: California's ocean is breaking heat records — but we can control it
We're failing our marine wildlife and undermining an economic engine that supports our communities.
It's easy to think of the ocean as a permanent fixture, given how ancient it is. But those salty waters had to come from something, somewhere. How did we end up with this vast, shimmering source of ...
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