Ocean Floor Blackouts Are Happening More Often Than Scientists Expected
Dr. Elena Vasquez was 200 feet beneath the Pacific Ocean when her research submersible suddenly went dark. Not just the lights—everything. The sonar,
March 11, 2026
Dr. Elena Vasquez was 200 feet beneath the Pacific Ocean when her research submersible suddenly went dark. Not just the lights—everything. The sonar,
March 11, 2026
Dr. Kenji Nakamura had been studying exoplanets for over two decades, but when the data from the Webb Space Telescope hit his screen
March 11, 2026
Lieutenant Colonel Marcus Holloway stared at his watch in disbelief. Seventy-one days ago, his team had received what seemed like an impossible mission:
March 11, 2026
Elena Vásquez was cleaning prawns in her small Valencia restaurant when she paused, looking at the mountain of discarded shells piling up in
March 11, 2026
Retired physics professor Elena Vasquez was sipping her morning coffee when her former colleague called with news that made her nearly drop her
March 11, 2026
Esperanza wiped the dust from her weathered hands as she watched the archaeologists carefully brush away centuries of soil from what looked like
March 11, 2026