Science
To survive asteroid impact, algae learned to hunt – Phys.org
Tiny, seemingly harmless ocean plants survived the darkness of the asteroid strike that killed the dinosaurs by learning a ghoulish behavior—eating other living…

Tiny, seemingly harmless ocean plants survived the darkness of the asteroid strike that killed the dinosaurs by learning a ghoulish behavioreating other living creatures.
Vast amounts of debris, soot, and aerosols shot into the atmosphere when an asteroid slammed into Earth 66 million years ago, plunging the planet into darkness, cooling the climate, and acidifying the oceans. Along with the dinosaurs on the land and giant reptiles in the ocean, the dominant species of marine algae were instantly…
-
General12 hours ago
Alleged Croydon Park gunman Artemios Mintzas charged with 25 offences
-
Noosa News20 hours ago
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese calls for political temperature to be ‘turned down’ after alleged death threat
-
General18 hours ago
Team Australia wins back-to-back Motocross of Nations titles
-
Noosa News20 hours ago
Bushfire on Moreton Island, north of Brisbane, burns 2,300 hectares before being contained