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Results 61 to 65 of 422 in Research and innovation

A graphic with a globe on the right, highlighting Spanish-speaking Latin American countries. On the left is a flow chart that says

Daniela Navarro-Perez collaborates with organisations and volunteers to increase access to science news in Spanish-speaking communities.

Professor Chris Davies, smiling, in front of a landscape of fields and hills.

The Professor of Theoretical Geophysics and Deputy Director at the Leeds Institute for Fluid Dynamics has been awarded for his outstanding contributions to Earth sciences.

A geological field section reveals a desiccated (extremely dry) land surface that was common all over the world 252 million years ago

Mega ocean warming El Niño events were a significant driver of the largest mass extinction of life on Earth some 252 million years ago, according to new research.

Fossils of animals that suffered during past anoxic events

A “tag-team” between the oceans and continents millions of years ago devasted marine life – and altered the course of evolution on Earth, say scientists.

The Siberian Trap was formed by the massive volcanic eruption that happened 252 million years ago, causing the Permian-Triassic mass extinction.

Catastrophic volcanic eruptions that warmed the planet millions of years ago shed new light on how plants regulate climate and sound a warning about rising temperatures.