FirstCuriosity on MSN
The scientific reason modern deep-sea thrillers get the ocean totally wrong
Image Credit: A still from 'Underwater' (Image: 20th Century Fox) Hollywood loves turning the deep ocean into a survival zone ...
Comic Book Resources on MSN
Shark horror movie Deep Blue Sea becomes streaming hit on Starz
1999 shark horror film starring Samuel L. Jackson, Deep Blue Sea, is dominating the Starz streaming charts in the US.
As delegates from member states of the International Seabed Authority entered the third and final week of high-stakes negotiations on deep-sea mining, they condemned a move made earlier this year by ...
"Deep Water," a new survival thriller starring Aaron Eckhart, opens in theaters Friday. Here's a list of 10 other movies ...
Reporter The Trump Administration signed an executive order late last month aiming to fast-track approval for seabed mining critical minerals found in the deep sea. The move has faced international ...
Deep Blue Sea director Renny Harlin doesn't recapture the slick appeal of his creature-feature classic with Deep Water, starring Aaron Eckhart.
Far below the ocean's surface, where sunlight fades into a cold blue darkness, the goblin shark moves slowly through the deep ...
When the United States recently escalated its confrontation with Venezuela—carrying out strikes in Caracas and capturing President Nicolás Maduro—the moves were framed as political intervention. But ...
The United States Department of the Interior (DOI) recently announced rule changes that would accelerate deep-sea mining in U.S. waters. The move includes shortened environmental review timelines and ...
More than 10,000 feet deep in the ocean, the seafloor is covered with what look like dark, lumpy potatoes. These polymetallic nodules, as they're known, take millions of years to form, slowly ...
Commercial deep-sea mining hasn’t yet begun, but it soon could — with the potential to reshape vast stretches of the ocean as companies move to extract minerals from the seafloor. However, this ...
This Deep-Sea discovery is so new it’s rewriting the map of life on Earth and it could reshape our understanding of the climate system. More than 9,000 meters below the Pacific Ocean, scientists have ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results