News

New images from the North Sea show never-before-seen landforms that were carved by a single, colossal ice sheet 1 million years ago and subsequently buried beneath a thick layer of mud.
Invasive species, both plant and animal, are reshaping America’s landscapes in profound and often irreversible ways.
We'll also listen to a book about landforms and bodies of water that are found on Earth. So go ahead, get your paper and your pencil, and let's get ready to "Read, Write, ROAR!" ...
Glaciologists used sound waves to reveal Ice Age landforms buried beneath almost 1 km of mud in the North Sea. The results suggest that the landforms were produced about 1 million years ago, when ...
Wave-like landforms on Mars provide clues about the planet’s icy history, its potential to support life, and the behavior of ...
Mars may be more like Earth than previously thought, despite having a thinner atmosphere and a dry, dusty surface.
Great escarpments can be found in southern Africa, India, Brazil and Australia The mystery of how some of the Earth's most dramatic landforms came into being has been solved, scientists believe ...
This image shows roundish landforms covered by polygons and surrounded by trenches. Some combination of ice expansion and contraction, sublimation, and flow may have created this landscape. ID ...
There are several interesting landforms including: 1) an outcrop with possible layering; 2) a cluster of other outcrops of darker-toned material that might be inverted channel deposits; and 3) an ...
River landforms can be divided into upper, middle and lower course features. As the river moves from the upper course to the lower course, the features in the river will change.
The landforms indicate that the ice sheet covered present-day Norway and extended toward the British Isles. Some of the imprints left by its retreat resemble crevasse-squeeze ridges — landforms ...