Green Matters on MSN
Scientists find mysterious, life-rich ecosystem nearly 12,000 feet beneath Greenland Sea
Small sea snails with their shells coated in orange material, amphipods, tube-dwelling worms, and deep-sea clams; these are ...
Lanice spongicola lives on a glass sponge, a deep-sea sponge with a skeleton made of silica, that rises from hard rock. The ...
As demand for cobalt, nickel, and other critical minerals surges, governments and companies are eyeing the deep ocean floor.
Our observations of life in the deep contain a trove of important information about ocean health, but more importantly, help connect audiences with our deep-sea neighbors and inspire the next ...
At the bottom of the world’s trenches, there’s a fish that shouldn’t exist. Here’s how it earned the title of the ...
Machines mining minerals in the deep ocean have been found to cause significant damage to life on the seabed, scientists carrying out the largest study of its kind say.
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Deep-Sea Mining Test in the Pacific Drastically Reduced Biodiversity and Animal Populations
The Metals Company wants to be the first firm to commercially mine the seafloor. The study it funded suggests that mining ...
Scientists discovered a giant underwater mountain. And it's teeming with deep sea life. An endeavor aboard the Falkor (too) — a 363-foot (111-meter) research vessel operated by the Schmidt Ocean ...
An ocean-mining company has funded some of the most comprehensive scientific studies of the deep seabed to date, and peer-reviewed results have begun to emerge. A collage of foraminifera, a kind of ...
Grist on MSNOpinion
What changed for deep-sea mining in 2025? Everything.
For more than a decade, The Metals Company has poured millions of dollars into researching and developing technology for ...
In this week's Science for All newsletter, Divya Gandhi explains how deep sea mining for minerals is stilfling marine life ...
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