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Roughly 252 million years ago, Earth experienced its deadliest known extinction. Known as the Permian–Triassic Mass ...
Vistra benefits from rising electricity demand driven by data centers, LNG growth and Permian Basin electrification.
Scientists have long agreed this event was triggered by a sudden surge in greenhouse gases which resulted in an intense and ...
Long before T. rex, the Earth was dominated by super-carnivores stranger and more terrifying than anything dreamed up by ...
The event in question is the Permian–Triassic Mass Extinction, also known as the “Great Dying,” which occurred around 252 ...
When Siberian volcanoes kicked off the Great Dying, the real climate villain turned out to be the rainforests themselves: once they collapsed, Earth’s biggest carbon sponge vanished, CO₂ rocketed, and ...
An ancient climate tipping point is revealed in new fossils dating back to Earth’s most severe extinction event, called the ...
The Permian Basin now produces over 6 million bpd, with Wood Mackenzie projecting a peak of 7.7 million bpd by 2035.
The end-Permian mass extinction was the deadliest event in Earth’s history. Also called the Great Dying, it is thought to have nearly wiped out all life on Earth 252 million years ago. Yet ...
Around 252 million years ago, Earth went through its most devastating extinction event, the Permian–Triassic Mass Extinction ...
Countries with higher availability of plant-based proteins tend to have longer life expectancies, especially among adults Animal-based protein is linked to lower infant mortality, but plant-based ...
This reconciliation supports an evolutionary-developmental model connecting plant origins to freshwater green algae, or charophyte algae, said Boston College paleobotanist Paul Strother, a co-author ...