About 3 million years ago, the Earth was just a couple of degrees warmer than it is today — and global sea levels were 53 feet higher

Posted On // Leave a Comment
 
Learn more about BI Prime View online
 
 
 
BUSINESS INSIDER
 
 
Science Select
 
 
 
About 3 million years ago, the Earth was just a couple of degrees warmer than it is today — and global sea levels were 53 feet higher
 
 
About 3 million years ago, the Earth was just a couple of degrees warmer than it is today — and global sea levels were 53 feet higher
 
About 3 million years ago, Earth was just a few degrees warmer than it is now. Mediterranean cave deposits reveal that sea levels were 53 feet higher.
 
 
 
 
 
These round homes have survived every major hurricane in the last 50 years, including Hurricane Dorian in the Bahamas. Take a look.
 
 
These round homes have survived every major hurricane in the last 50 years, including Hurricane Dorian in the Bahamas. Take a look.
 
Deltec Homes' round, aerodynamic designs have withstood previous hurricanes like Harvey, Irma, and Michael.
 
 
 
 
 
President Trump keeps falsely saying the US has the 'world's cleanest and safest air.' Actually, he's making pollution worse.
 
 
President Trump keeps falsely saying the US has the 'world's cleanest and safest air.' Actually, he's making pollution worse.
 
The US doesn't have the cleanest air in the world. In fact, measured in terms of PM 2.5, the country comes in seventh, and it is getting worse.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Poop-testing startup uBiome was once valued at $600 million by Silicon Valley's top VCs. It just filed for bankruptcy.
 
 
Poop-testing startup uBiome was once valued at $600 million by Silicon Valley's top VCs. It just filed for bankruptcy.
 
The poop-testing firm said it hopes to entice an investor to purchase it for its scientific knowledge. It also aims to sell its sole remaining product at CVS.
 
 
 
 
 
This credit-card-sized phone can do only 3 things and doesn't have any apps — and it might be the key to freeing us from our smartphones
 
 
This credit-card-sized phone can do only 3 things and doesn't have any apps — and it might be the key to freeing us from our smartphones
 
The Light Phone 2 is the successor to Light's original device from 2017. It's sort of the anti-smartphone: It has only a few features and zero apps.
 
 
 
 
 
Meet the 7 companies changing how doctors get paid and building the future of medicine
 
 
Meet the 7 companies changing how doctors get paid and building the future of medicine
 
Iora Health, ChenMed, and Oak Street Health are part of a crop of disruptors changing how patients get their healthcare.
 
 
 
 
 
Officials are investigating a second death and more than 200 cases of serious lung disease tied to vaping. Here are the other health risks you should know about.
 
 
Officials are investigating a second death and more than 200 cases of serious lung disease tied to vaping. Here are the other health risks you should know about.
 
Investigators don't know the cause and haven't identified a single common brand or drug across all of the cases. Here's what you need to know.
 
 
 
 
 
Hundreds of skeletons were found in a mysterious Himalayan lake. A new analysis shows that some of them died 1,000 years apart.
 
 
Hundreds of skeletons were found in a mysterious Himalayan lake. A new analysis shows that some of them died 1,000 years apart.
 
A Himalayan lake was the final resting place of an estimated 800 skeletons. Researchers still don't know what killed them.
 
 
 
 
 
Poop-testing startup uBiome has filed for bankruptcy. Some of its largest creditors are health insurers saying they're owed millions in refunds.
 
 
Poop-testing startup uBiome has filed for bankruptcy. Some of its largest creditors are health insurers saying they're owed millions in refunds.
 
The biggest claim comes in at $2.1 million and was made by a fraud specialist at health insurer Cigna.
 
 
 
 
 
Satellite collisions may trigger a space-junk disaster that could end human access to orbit. Here's how.
 
 
Satellite collisions may trigger a space-junk disaster that could end human access to orbit. Here's how.
 
Experts worry that debris orbiting Earth could lead to a "Kessler syndrome" domino effect that cuts off human access to space for hundreds of years.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Was this email forwarded to you?
 
Download on the app store   Get it on google play
 
Share this
 
fb   tw   g+
 
You received this email because you signed up to this
Business Insider newsletter using the
email: nguyenvu1187.love5@blogger.com
 
Email preferences Unsubscribe
TERMS OF SERVICE PRIVACY POLICY
1 Liberty Plaza, 8th Floor. New York, NY 10006
 

0 comments:

Post a Comment