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Earth's crust hides enough 'gold' hydrogen to power the world for tens of thousands of years, emerging research suggests
Reservoirs of hydrogen gas that form naturally in Earth's crust could help humans decarbonize. The challenge now is finding these accumulations and working out how best to mine them, experts say.
Iron makes up about 5 per cent of the Earth's crust and is the most abundant element in the whole Earth (about 35 per cent).
One of the oldest unsolved riddles in planetary science concerns the origin of the moon. Over a century ago, George Darwin ...
Deeper partnerships can help India mitigate geopolitical risks in the Indo-Pacific and reduce dependence on China ...
ScienceAlert on MSN
Ancient 'Wet Lava Ball' Exoplanet Defies Expectations
A molten lava world cloaked in a thick envelope of vaporized rock could be the strongest evidence we have yet of a rocky ...
Live Science on MSN
A huge helium shortage is looming — but ancient rocks in Earth's crust may be hiding massive reservoirs
For decades, helium has been produced with natural gas, generating huge carbon emissions. Now, geologists are looking for new ...
Neutron stars explained through stellar remnants and collapsed stars, revealing extreme density, gravity, magnetism, and ...
Researchers found that eroded lava rubble beneath the South Atlantic can trap enormous amounts of CO2 for tens of millions of ...
Scientists have discovered an unusually thick and mysterious layer of rock deep beneath the ocean floor under Bermuda, a ...
North America accelerates rare-earth independence as REAlloys and SRC launch the first commercial heavy-REE refinery.
Dust returned by China’s Chang’e-6 mission reveals rare, water-rich CI chondrite meteorite fragments—found on the Moon for ...
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