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Videos of the North Sea’s large, eye-popping waves often go viral on TikTok—but people have been navigating these stormy waters for millennia.
Scientists have discovered hundreds of giant sand bodies beneath the North Sea that appear to defy fundamental geological ...
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Green Matters on MSNWhy Is the North Sea So Dangerous? The History and Science Behind Its Bad ReputationIf you have become enamored with watching videos of the not-so-gentle North Sea, you are not alone by any means. Here's why it's so dangerous.
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Marine heat waves in the Baltic Sea: Researchers investigate ... - MSNMarine heat waves—periods in which the upper water layers in the sea temporarily become exceptionally warm—are occurring with increasing frequency worldwide. Recent studies by the Leibniz ...
A 100-foot wave hits a ship in the North Sea, during an intense storm. Luckily the ship managed to withstand the blow.
The foundation aims to list all unknown graves on the coasts of the North Sea, hoping to identify remains.
Glaciologists used sound waves to reveal Ice Age landforms buried beneath almost 1 km of mud in the North Sea. The results suggest that the landforms were produced about 1 million years ago, when ...
For the North Atlantic, Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico, tropical cyclone formation is not expected during the next seven days. That's according to the National Hurricane Center in Miami ...
In 1941, the Norwegian boat Arnefjord made a perilous 200-mile North Sea crossing, transporting refugees. 83 years later, it recreated this journey as part of a flotilla commemorating VE Day, honoring ...
Freak waves are more common than previously thought and pose a grave threat to offshore wind infrastructure and vessels, according to a new research project into their occurrence in the North Sea.
Three houses, all on the same street, have fallen into the sea in Rodanthe, North Carolina, in less than a week. And officials say the threat of more collapses in the Outer Banks is only growing ...
Since the close of World War II, more than 115 people have died from encounters with unexploded ordnance in the North Sea—but a lingering, invisible threat could be even even more deadly.
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