Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Earth.
When hot and cold water are put into the fridge at the same time, the hot water freezes first, which is counter-intuitive but true
When I went to my little cousin's house the other day, I happened to run into his mother and asked him to help me freeze the ice water. Then this little guy picked up the hot water he had just boiled, filled a glass, and put it in the fridge. When his mother saw this, she hurriedly took the hot water out and then criticized and taught him. Looking at his aggrieved face, I couldn't help but want to take revenge for him.
By Paul Weiest3 years ago in Earth
How Farm Raised Frankenfish Attack Wild Salmon and Environment Hooked by False Marketing
One of my fondest memories is catching salmon in the Pacific Ocean in younger days. A small live herring is hooked through its back, lowered into the dark water to be a delicious snack for a passing salmon. Once caught, the sudden flight away, the spin reel whirring, the run-and-pull minutes to gradually tire out its strength to survive, and finally lifting up the beautiful silver scaled fish.
By Annemarie Berukoff3 years ago in Earth
5 Interesting Images from the Earth of Living Things
The Gorgonian (Fan Corals) The Fan Corals, also known as Gorgonaria, are marine invertebrates. Each of the corals is called a polyp. Colonies formed by the decoupling of polyps can be of different shapes. Polyp colonies are named this way because they are fan-shaped. Each polyp in fan corals has eight tentacles. Fan corals feed mainly on plankton and catch prey using their tentacles. The shapes of fan corals are closely related to their feeding strategies. They usually grow in the opposite direction to the flow to be able to catch more nutrients.
By Selen Kurtoglu3 years ago in Earth
Earth will reach a tipping point, Antarctica is not ruled out to melting and the sea level will rise by 12 meters
A catastrophic tipping point in the Earth's climate is now approaching mankind. Researchers say that along with the irreversible melting of the ice caps in the polar regions, and the irreversible development of the Amazon rainforest, the "lungs of the earth", towards the savannah, perhaps in a few decades, until the end of the century, the earth's climate may reach the tipping point.
By Kalmi kovova3 years ago in Earth
Why do people want to supplement stem cells nowadays? What value does it have for our bodies?
The human body is composed of 40 trillion to 60 trillion cells, and cells are the smallest structural and functional units of the body, with more than 230 types. Each cell has a relatively fixed survival cycle, for example, 120 days for red blood cells and only 3-5 days for lymphocytes. All cells, on the other hand, are derived from stem cell differentiation.
By Apostolakis3 years ago in Earth
Oymyakon at -71°C, a trip into the extreme cold, do you dare to come?
Located in the northeastern part of Russia's Siberian region, Oymyakon is a small, unassuming village that once had a record low temperature of minus 71.2 degrees Celsius. Since becoming famous, it has attracted many thrill-seeking travelers.
By Clemmens Crofton3 years ago in Earth
Cool like the other side of the flower
Autumn is a harvest season and a golden season. Golden yellow crops, golden yellow leaves, golden yellow everywhere, and all kinds of small golden flowers, everywhere is golden yellow a color, as if it is everywhere gold, very nice.
By Vranes Samaha3 years ago in Earth






