Skip to main content

AI Bias Analysis

4 models · Takes ~15 seconds

Science Daily

Ancient asteroid craters may have sparked Earth’s oxygen-producing life

ScienceDaily Composite
ShareXFacebook

A hidden crater in South Korea may hold clues to one of the biggest turning points in Earth’s history: the rise of oxygen. Scientists discovered fossil-like stromatolites — layered structures built by ancient microbes — inside the Hapcheon impact crater, suggesting that asteroid strikes may have created warm, mineral-rich lakes where early oxygen-producing life could flourish.

S

Source

Science Daily

Read full article at Science Daily

Opens original article in a new tab

Advertisement

Related Science Stories

Blue and fin whale sightings on the rise in the Southeast Atlantic
Phys.org

Blue and fin whale sightings on the rise in the Southeast Atlantic

More than 40 years after the end of commercial whaling, new research reveals a recent increase in sightings of the world's two largest whale species in the southeastern Atlantic. The findings, published in the African Journal of Marine Science, compile more than 60 years of confirmed sightings and strandings from Namibia and South Africa's west coast. Although overall numbers remain low, sightings of both species have increased markedly in recent years—with 95% of observations recorded since 201

Read more →
Advertisement