The catastrophic impact of an asteroid 66 million years ago brought death and devastation on Earth—but also fascinating new life.
The exceptionally well-preserved fossils shine a light on the mass extinction that brought an end to the "Biological Big Bang." ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Marine life evolved rapidly after the dinosaur killing asteroid impact 66 million years ago
The impact of the asteroid 66 million years ago did not stop life from returning to normal for very long. New research shows that life, particularly marine life, recovered much more quickly than ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Life on Earth hit an evolutionary turbo boost after the dinosaur wipeout
Sixty-six million years ago, a 6 mile wide asteroid slammed into Earth and erased more than 75% of life on Earth in a geological instant. The catastrophe that ended the age of Tyrannosaurus and ...
Q4 2025 Earnings Call February 12, 2026 4:00 AM EST Good morning, and a warm welcome to URW's Full Year 2025 results, my ...
Good morning, and welcome to DNO's Full Year 2025 Interim Results Earnings Call. My name is Jostein Lovas, and I am the ...
OpenAI has launched a new Codex desktop app for macOS that lets developers run multiple AI coding agents in parallel, ...
At the event, PwC formally launched Nigeria’s results from its 29th Annual Global CEO Survey, revealing that 90 per cent of Nigerian CEOs expected the economy to improve within the next 12 months, up ...
Global offshore wind hits record growth with massive turbines and auctions, even as U.S. policy reversals and economic pressures threaten momentum.
Deep within a cave on New Zealand’s North Island, scientists have uncovered a long-lost record of life from a million years ago.
The fossils offer a rare glimpse into a cataclysmic event that brought a sudden end to the greatest explosion of life in our planet's history.
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