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Some of us no doubt remember the 2004 disaster film “The Day After Tomorrow,” in which the collapse of the Atlantic Ocean’s currents led to an ice-covered Northern Hemisphere in a matter of days.
Real Science on MSN
How This Noise Became the Most Famous Unexplained Ocean Sound
In 1997, researchers recorded a powerful underwater sound in the Pacific Ocean unlike anything ever heard before. Nicknamed ...
Kevin Costner's Waterworld, the misunderstood 1995 sci-fi flick that was the most expensive movie of all time, is a streaming ...
The exhibition featuring more than 200 pieces from the culture-changing blockbuster is the first full show in the four-year ...
Proximity is how CBC News builds trust and grows relationships with you, the people we serve, including those of you with ...
Explore Brad Pitt’s five biggest box-office hits and find out if his latest racing drama, F1, gave the actor his best return on investment yet.
A year after record-breaking Hurricane Beryl, the Caribbean is still reeling – but on one island, defiant traditions are ...
Set against the elegant interiors of Dalkeith Palace, Photo Dalkeith is an exhibition of the highest calibre, writes Susan ...
The Weather Network on MSN
Key ocean current weaker than previously thought, could collapse in 30 years
The AMOC is driven, by differences in water temperatures and salinity, but climate change could disrupt that balance.
Global shipping, sea currents and habitat factors are driving the spread of Indo-Pacific fish species in the Mediterranean ...
Climate Crisis 247 on MSN
Atlantic Ocean Current Could Collapse, Scientists Warn
Douglas McIntyre, Editor-in-Chief at Climate Crisis 24/7, reported that scientists now believe the collapse of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation—a crucial ocean current—could occur ...
The seas have long sustained human life, but a new UC Santa Barbara study shows that rising climate and human pressures are pushing the oceans toward a dangerous threshold. Vast and powerful, the ...
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