After the asteroid smashed into Earth around 66 million years ago, it didn't take life that long to rebound, a new study ...
The impact of the asteroid in present-day Yucatan wiped out almost all life on Earth. It recovered faster than previously ...
CT Insider on MSN
Volunteer-run CT observatory is part of a NASA mission to track asteroids and comets
The John J. McCarthy Observatory - run by volunteers on the grounds of New Milford High School - has been watching the night sky for 25 years.
The impact dinosaurs had on Earth was so big that their extinction seems to have caused dramatic and wide-ranging changes to ...
Sixty-six million years ago, an asteroid strike and volcanic eruptions triggered a global climate catastrophe. Earth plunged ...
A new study reveals Tyrannosaurus rex took 40 years to reach full size, not 30, as previously thought. Researchers analyzed bone tissue from fossils to determine their results.
Discover Magazine on MSN
Evolving plankton may have kicked off life's comeback after the dinosaur-killing asteroid impact
Learn how the emergence of new plankton species started life's swift recovery after the asteroid impact that killed most ...
About 66 million years ago, the fiery asteroid impact that wiped out dinosaurs - and much of life on Earth - left clues about ...
Cyprus Mail on MSN
Study finds Tyrannosaurus rex did not reach full size until age 40
There is no question that Tyrannosaurus rex got big. In fact, this fearsome dinosaur may have been Earth’s most massive land ...
Migration‘ serves as the sequel to ‘Greenland‘ and takes place five years after the cataclysmic event triggered by the Clarke comet’s descent on Earth. Despite humanity’s best efforts to pull itself ...
LANL NEWS RELEASE On May 28, 2014, “Los Alamos National Laboratory” was one of the question categories on the television game show Jeopardy! Prompted by short videos filmed at the ...
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