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Latest Earth News | Page 11

Space radiation can damage satellites − my team discovered that a next-generation material could self-heal when exposed to cosmic rays
UQ Top Of Nature Rankings
Roots Of Anthropocene
Network For Researching Anthropocene
A groundbreaking discovery: how we found remnants of Earth’s primordial crust near Perth
Minerals exploration activity charging ahead across Victoria
Defunct satellites burning up in the atmosphere could damage the ozone layer. Here’s how
Patrick Roberts Awarded 29th Annual Thuringian Research Prize for Top Performance in Basic Research
Dutton’s nuclear nightmare a blatant attempt to keep burning coal and gas
EPA has lowered the screening level for lead in soil – here’s what that could mean for households across the US
How glacier algae are challenging the way we think about evolution
Study confirms rotation of Earth’s inner core has slowed
Keeping astronauts healthy in space isn’t easy − new training programs will prepare students to perform medicine while thousands of miles away from Earth
Call out to local artists as EoI opens for Climate Conversations 2025
Some of Earth’s most ancient lifeforms can live on hydrogen – and we can learn from their chemical powers
Nations realise they need to take risks or lose the race to the Moon
The Hubble telescope has shifted into one-gyro mode after months of technical issues − an aerospace engineering expert explains
Is Earth really getting too hot for people to survive? A scientist explains extreme heat and the role of climate change
Marine COâ‚‚ removal technologies could depend on the appetite of the ocean’s tiniest animals
Illawarra offshore wind zone declaration good news for climate
Will we really all die from minor scratches in the future? – Q&A with antibiotic resistance expert
Melissa Caddick mystery shows we need more research of a rare kind – marine forensics
‘Wise Up, Rise Up’ On World Elder Abuse Awareness Day
Ending native forest logging would help Australia’s climate goals much more than planting trees
Searching for a female partner for the world’s ‘loneliest’ plant
Commercial astronauts shed light on flights’ health impacts
Space weather forecasting needs an upgrade to protect future Artemis astronauts
Shepparton inspection blitz targets non-compliant building and plumbing practices
Research breakthrough to take space missions to new heights
Inaugural Swinburne-CSIRO Indigenous Research Fellow joins national water quality forecasting project
South Australia’s enigmatic pink sand was born in ice-covered Antarctic mountains, new research shows
No bones about it: 100-million-year-old bones reveal new species of pterosaur
Action-packed Exhibition To Open At Artspace
Mountainous Mystery Uncovered In SA’s Pink Sands
Nitrous oxide greenhouse emissions increase by 40 per cent in 40 years
TRISH shares new health data from first all-civilian orbital space mission
PFAS Are Toxic ‘forever Chemicals’ That Linger In Our Air, Water, Soil And Bodies – Here’s How To Keep Them Out Of…
Fish and chips on Mars: our research shows how colonists could produce their own food
Where are Australian PFAS Drinking Water ‘Hotspots’
Space Open To Cyber Attack
NASA’s asteroid sample mission gave scientists around the world the rare opportunity to study an artificial meteor
Understanding Drivers Of Biodiversity
Simulations dampen excitement about liquid water on Mars
Scientists call the region of space influenced by the Sun the heliosphere – but without an interstellar probe, they don’t know much…
NEW CATASTROPHIC TOXIC LEAK IN BASS STRAIT EXPOSED
Blue Mountains City Council supports bold new creative projects
Our Payment Details Have Changed
The Sun is reaching the peak of its activity – here’s how that could cause more auroras and solar storms