Described by one researcher as looking ‘already dead’, the enigmatic creatures are one of the least understood species on the planet ...
A Greenland shark swimming through the North Atlantic today may have been alive before the modern world existed. Researchers ...
Greenland sharks are spilling new secrets about antiaging.
SHARK BYTES on MSN
We are still discovering sharks in the dark
More than 40 percent of known shark species have been described in the last few decades. This video explores why the deep ocean remains one of the last places on Earth where large animals are still ...
Chip Chick on MSN
Greenland sharks can survive for centuries in the dark, and they could hold clues to preserving human vision
The longest-living vertebrates in the world are Greenland sharks. They live for up to 400 years deep down in the waters of ...
“Chinstraps are declining globally,” Martinez said. “Models show that they might get extinct before the end of the century at ...
The High Seas Treaty took effect Jan. 17, creating the first global framework to protect and manage the vast waters beyond national borders that cover more than 40 percent of the planet. Humanity is ...
From affordable family sun breaks to luxury safaris and epic adventures, these trips offer something for every traveller ...
Live Science on MSN
An ocean the size of the Arctic once covered half of Mars, new images hint
Mars may have been a "blue planet" with an ocean the size of today's Arctic Ocean, a new study suggests.
A group of German scientists tested the effects of a more acidic ocean on sharks' teeth and found that future generations of sharks could have weaker teeth because of changing ocean chemistry.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results