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Corryvreckan whirlpool: Scotland's 'raging cauldron' that is named after a Norse king and said to house a witch
By Sascha Pare published
The Corryvreckan whirlpool is one of the largest whirlpools in the world, reaching speeds of 8.5 knots and producing a roaring sound that can be heard 10 miles away.

Atlantic ocean currents are weakening — and it could make the climate in some regions unrecognizable
By Sascha Pare published
A cold blob of water in the North Atlantic is an ominous sign that a system of currents that regulate the planet's climate could be weakening.

Earth Day: When is it and why do we celebrate it?
By Patrick Pester last updated
Earth Day is an annual global event on April 22 that celebrates Earth and raises public awareness about the environment.

A long-lost ice sheet could predict the future of New York City — one in which Lower Manhattan and Coney Island are 'perpetually submerged'
By Evan Howell published
Scientists are rethinking what we knew about a vanished ice sheet — and that could spell trouble for New York City.

Pair of 'glowing' lava lakes spotted on Africa's most active volcanoes as they erupt simultaneously
By Harry Baker published
Earth from space This false-color satellite photo from 2014 shows the immense heat emanating from lava lakes at the summits of a pair of simultaneously erupting volcanoes in Congo.

The North Pole could shift 90 feet west by 2100
By Skyler Ware published
As climate change melts ice sheets and glaciers, water is being redistributed across the globe — and could end up moving the point of Earth's axis of rotation.

Iran's folded rocks: The crumpled mountains at the intersection of Asia and Europe
By Sascha Pare published
Iran's folded rocks are a colorful formation that is part of the Greater Caucasus mountains, which formed when the Eurasian tectonic plate collided with the Arabian plate millions of years ago.

Antarctica: Facts about the southernmost continent
By Nola Taylor Redd last updated
Antarctica is the coldest, windiest, and driest continent. Because so little moisture falls as rain or snow, Antarctica is classified as a desert.

'Quiet Chernobyl' changed Earth's surface so much the planet's mantle is still moving 80 years later
By Sascha Pare published
The land beneath the former Aral Sea in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan is rising and will continue to do so for many decades. Now, scientists have an explanation that involves the sea drying up.

An ocean of magma formed early in Earth's history and it may still influence our planet today, study finds
By Stephanie Pappas published
Remnants of a liquid layer of magma near Earth's core, formed in the first few hundred million years of the planet's history, may still persist today as odd anomalies in the mantle.
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