Plus: Vivaldi browser shuns AI, Samsung has a new sustainable display, and Frankfurt Airport tests Auracast for gate announcements.
A group of ocean bacteria long considered perfectly adapted to life in nutrient-poor waters may be more vulnerable to environmental change than scientists realized. The bacteria, known as SAR11, ...
As the smallest model in the lineup, the new 13-inch Samsung Color E-Paper offers businesses a compact display option for ...
Samsung's new 13-inch E-Paper is the world’s first commercial display to apply a bio-resin derived from phytoplankton in its ...
The 13-inch Samsung Color E-Paper features the world's first display housing made in part with a bio-resin crafted from ...
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A thin line in the ocean is doing what we thought was impossible
New research featured on Nature Climate Change reveals ocean fronts are places where different water masses meet, usually ...
Narrow bands of ocean covering just over one-third of the world's seas are responsible for absorbing nearly three-quarters of ...
Companies around the world are racing to patent the genetic building blocks of plankton – microscopic ocean life that ...
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Why we owe our lives to phytoplankton
Thank you to the Monterey Bay Aquarium for partnering with us on this episode of SciShow. Visit them or if you are in the ...
Each year, vast blooms of phytoplankton spread across the Southern Ocean, drawing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and ...
Marine microbes cooperate far more than they compete, reshaping how scientists understand ocean ecosystems and climate ...
By examining life beneath winter ice, this postdoc reveals how climate change affects the hidden phytoplankton ecosystems.
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