Live Science on MSN
Time-lapse of radar images shows how the Antarctic ice shelf collapses
Pine Island Glacier, one of the fastest-shrinking glaciers in Antarctica, hastened its slide into the sea between 2017 and ...
India Today on MSN
Watch: Alaska's magnitude 7 quake sends shockwaves around the world
The data come from a dense network of seismographs, turning thousands of tiny ground vibrations into a sweeping, time‑lapse ...
Researchers set up GPS-timestamped cameras above Barry Glacier in 2020. Time-lapse records from the cameras helped tie seismic signals to real motion on the glacier and the Barry Arm landslide slope.
Researchers monitoring the unstable Barry Landslide in Alaska have identified a new class of short, high-frequency seismic signals that appear seasonally. Since 2020, researchers have equipped the Bar ...
In 2019 hundreds of mourners, many wearing black, attended a funeral for the glacier led by a priest and glaciologists.
5don MSN
Hundreds of iceberg earthquakes detected at the crumbling end of Antarctica's 'doomsday glacier'
Glacial earthquakes are a special type of earthquake generated in cold, icy regions. First discovered in the Northern ...
Utah Sen. Mike Lee has proposed changes to the Senate appropriations bill that could open the door for the sale of national ...
Morning Overview on MSNOpinion
For the first time, scientists catch Antarctica’s Doomsday Glacier cracking
Antarctica’s most feared ice giant is no longer just slipping quietly into the sea. For the first time, scientists are ...
The center of Mendenhall Glacier’s terminus on November 23, 2025. Scientists confirm the glacier is no longer interfacing with Mendenhall Lake. (Photo by Alix Soliman/KTOO) For the first time, ...
Swirling underwater eddies are aggressively melting two Antarctic glaciers, a recent study found, including the one that could raise sea levels by multiple feet.
Learn about the alarming rate of glacier extinction due to climate change. New research predicts that thousands of glaciers will disappear by mid-century.
Underwater “storms” are melting the ice shelf protecting the Thwaites “doomsday” glacier in Antarctica, raising concerns that we could be underestimating future sea level rise. Up to 10 kilometres ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results