Four men were rescued after their boat sank north of the Dominican Republic and taken to Jacksonville, the Coast guard said in a release.
The mega-iceberg, which is double the size of Greater London and weighs nearly a trillion tonnes, has been spinning northwards from Antarctica since December. | ITV National News
The world’s largest iceberg is still on the move and there are fears that it could be headed north from Antarctica towards the island of South Georgia.
The four men, David Potts, John Potts, Andrew Cullar and Russel Case, were sailing the Mariposa from St. Croix to Texas and planned to stop in Key West when they were forced to abandon ship after thei
AFRICA is splitting apart at double the speed than scientists first thought. A 35-mile-long crack in Ethiopia’s desert, first discovered in 2005, has been widening by half an inch per year.
Four men were rescued from a life raft after their sailing vessel hit a submerged rock and sank near the Dominican Republic. The U.S. Coast Guard transported the men to Jacksonville, Florida.
Earth, being 71% covered in water, is influenced by the ocean and its movements. In the Atlantic Ocean, a system of connected currents, called the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), moves water throughout the world's oceans powered by a combination of winds and ocean density.
The AMOC, crucial for Earth's climate, has remained stable over the past 60 years, per a WHOI study. Advanced methods show no significant decline, challenging earlier research. While its future stability under climate change remains uncertain,
Scientists studied ocean heat exchange instead of surface temperature. Their data shows no AMOC decline since 1963.
The world’s largest iceberg, A23a, is heading north from Antarctica toward South Georgia, a British Overseas Territory in the southern Atlantic Ocean. In the past, giant icebergs grounding near South Georgia have caused devastating consequences,
A University of Derby study led by Dr. Phethean proposes Earth has six continents, not seven. Using advanced geological techniques, researchers sugges
A scientist has warned that an area of East Africa could break away from the rest of the continent sooner than previously thought. A 35-mile-long crack was discovered along a section of the East African Rift (EAR) in Afar, Ethiopia, in 2005, and experts say it will eventually separate from the rest of the continent as a new body of water emerges.