No. Earthquakes cannot be predicted on any sort of scale, regardless of historical context. Community notes added to the initial X post have said the claim is an example of fear-mongering.
Think of it this way: the ground acts like a giant heat sink during the day. It absorbs heat from the sun, then releases it back into the air. But on a clear night, with no clouds to trap heat, the ...
New research from Macquarie University has pinpointed likely locations of essential metals crucial for advancing a green ...
Many counties and communities have deemed their roads impassable as snow and ice have created slick spots on roadways.
Awe doesn't have to be reserved for far-flung places. Instead, take a moment to learn about the landscape just outside your ...
( NewsNation) — The Los Angeles wildfires are being fueled by what the National Weather Service said could be the strongest ...
Yukon Metals geologists completed eight ERT and IP geophysical surveys over the eastern portion of the 2024 soil sampled ...
President-elect Donald Trump suggested renaming the Gulf of Mexico after the U.S. But can he really do that? Here's how place ...
In an almost offhand digression Tuesday, president-elect Donald Trump idly mentioned he was going to change the name of the ...
A team of researchers led by UC Santa Cruz recently released a sophisticated new map that reveals, for the first time, the ...
Egypt's Wadi Al-Hitan — or "Valley of the Whales" — is famous for its abundance of fossils from the Eocene epoch.