News

The bow of a US Navy cruiser damaged in a World War II battle in the Pacific has shone new light on one of the most ...
A Japanese torpedo slammed into the USS New Orleans in 1942, tearing off nearly one-third of the ship and killing over 180 ...
During the Battle of Tassafaronga, the USS New Orleans was struck by a Japanese torpedo that detonated its forward magazines, killing 182 men and ripping away a large forward section of the cruiser.
While rich mineral deposits promise centuries of supply, critics argue Japan’s deep-ocean venture risks an irreversible ‘race to the bottom’.
To find the bow of this ship is an opportunity to remember the sacrifice of this valiant crew, even on one of the worst nights in U.S. Navy history.” ...
The Deep Sea Conservation Coalition said closing a section of the Chatham Rise fishery was a start, but not enough - and ...
Jim Chalmers' worrying admission about secret interest rate decisions that should have every Aussie concerned ...
Because they are the cradle of life and a climate shield. Because when the ocean thrives, so do we – and right now, they're ...
In the South China Sea, off China’s Hainan Island, researchers dropped the carcass of a cow about 5,340 feet down to the ...
The darkest depths of the Red Sea could shed light on the origins of life itself, thanks to a stunning discovery made by scientists. A team of researchers at the University of Miami hit the bottom of ...
Micheál Martin's government has paid lip service to establishing new marine protected areas but the recent backflip on the ...
The bow, which fell to a depth of 2,214 feet, had been unaccounted for since Nov. 30, 1942, when a Japanese torpedo detonated the ship’s forward magazines during the Battle of Tassafaronga, the ...