News

With the backing of the US government, a Canadian company is poised to sidestep UN laws and start vacuuming what it deems battery-grade metals from international waters.
A new deep-sea device developed by China has caught the world’s attention. The China Ship Scientific Research Centre (CSSRC) ...
Geologists discover that a huge prehistoric tsunami carried amber from coastal forests to deep waters in Japan 115 million ...
Lost for more than 80 years, the severed bow of the legendary USS New Orleans—torn away by a torpedo in one of World War II's ...
First Nations people started trading 'trepang', or sea cucumber, in the 1700s, and now these tiny marine animals may help ...
How a professional ship-sinker is about to turn a famous ocean liner into the world’s largest artificial reef The SS United ...
From a homely harbourside B&B to a clifftop converted palazzo, Italy’s most alluring coastline is home to some outstanding ...
The U.S. push to mine international waters for metals defies global efforts to control and protect these fragile ecosystems.
Recent reductions in U.S. oceanographic assets are limiting scientists' ability to access vital materials in the ocean.
Despite widespread human impacts on wildlife diversity worldwide, many fish communities on the seafloor have maintained their ...
A team of scientists teamed up to date and identify the collection of more than 6,000 fossils, placing them between 131,000 ...