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Bermuda's Floating Mystery Solved

On: Friday, March 20, 2026

Bermuda
For millions of years, the archipelago of Bermuda has floated, an apparent anomaly in the Atlantic.

Now, seismologists have finally solved the mystery of why this volcanic island, inactive for over 30 million years, hasn’t sunk back into the ocean.

The answer lies not in hot magma plumes, but in a massive, never-before-seen "rock raft" deep beneath the seabed. Beneath Bermuda’s oceanic crust lies a rock layer 20 kilometers (12.4 miles) thick.

"We identify features associated with a ∼20 km thick layer of rock below the oceanic crust that has not yet been reported," the researchers from the Carnegie Institution for Science in the US wrote in the study paper.

"This thick layer beneath the crust likely was emplaced when Bermuda was volcanically active 30–35 million years ago and could support the bathymetric swell," it added.

Interestingly, the study suggests that the Bermuda swell is not supported by a hot mantle plume or a deep thermal anomaly, as is commonly assumed for other large bathymetric swells.

Volcanic islands, like the famed Hawaiian chain, are typically buoyed by hot, active magma plumes pushing up the Earth’s crust.

But Bermuda’s last major eruption was roughly 30 million years ago. Geologically, it should have subsided and vanished long ago as the underlying lithosphere cooled.

Yet, the island remains, sitting atop a bathymetric swell — a large, persistent bulge in the ocean floor.

This unique structure likely accounts for Bermuda’s continued elevation, preventing its subsidence long after the volcanic activity ceased tens of millions of years ago.

Using seismic data from a permanent station on the island, researchers analyzed recordings of large global earthquakes.

By studying how seismic waves suddenly changed speed, they created a detailed image of the Earth’s layers up to 31 miles (50 km) beneath Bermuda.

Surprisingly, researchers found a unique, massive geological layer wedged between the oceanic crust and the rigid upper mantle.

Measuring 12 miles in thickness, this layer is unlike anything previously observed beneath an island located in the middle of a tectonic plate.

Moreover, this immense layer acts like a "buoyant raft" because it is less dense than the surrounding rigid upper mantle, thereby supporting the island’s elevation.

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Solar Storms Threatened Starlink Satellites

On: Thursday, March 19, 2026

Starlink
There is a team of scientists that expressed concern has warned that the space congestion problem is in danger of spiralling out of control, describing our current situation as a "House of Cards".

Individual satellites within mega-constellations, such as SpaceX’s Starlink, must perform an increasing number of collision-avoidance maneuvers each year.

According to scientists, solar storms could trigger Kessler Syndrome — a scenario in which satellites collide, leading to a cascading, destructive event in Earth’s orbit.

A Federal Communications Commission (FCC) filing in 2023 showed that SpaceX’s Starlink satellites had to make 50,000 collision avoidance maneuvers over the previous four years.

That same year, Hugh Lewis, a professor of astronautics at the University of Southampton in the UK, calculated that, if trends continued, Starlink satellites would have to perform roughly a million maneuvers every six months by 2028.

This leaves little margin for error. Ultimately, space is becoming increasingly congested, and we are edging closer to the cascading destructive scenario known as Kessler Syndrome. This could ultimately prevent spacecraft from reaching orbit, as there would be too great a risk of collision with small space debris.

Now, a team at Princeton University has warned that solar storms could be the tipping point that leads to a Kessler Syndrome scenario. In a pre-print, they explain that solar storms heat the atmosphere, increasing atmospheric drag. This means that more fuel is required to maintain orbits and perform evasive maneuvers.

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Cube-Shaped Skull Discovered In Ancient Site

On: Monday, March 16, 2026

Cube-Shaped Skull
Nearly every corner of the world contains archaeological evidence of the ancient practice of artificial cranial deformation. The Huns of Central Asia are a well-known example, but so are the Hirota people of ancient Japan, the Maya of Central America, and even members of the peasant class in Toulouse, France, around the end of the 19th century.

Today, some cultures in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Vanuatu in the South Pacific still practice the tradition.

Most of these examples—both historical and contemporary—form pointed skulls by binding an infant’s head while the skull bones fuse (typically up until the age of two). It’s not incredibly common to see a cube-shaped skull, but the Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (INAH) recently reported one such discovery in the Mexican state of Tamaulipas near the Balcón de Montezuma—an archaeological site occupied by various ethnic groups between 650 B.C.E and 1200 C.E.

One of these communities, around the year 400 C.E., contained roughly 90 houses and a variety of artifacts. As the archaeologists sifted through these finds, they discovered what appeared to be a parallelepiped, or cube-shaped, skull. Artificial skull deformation was a common practice among the Maya, but hasn’t been documented in this particular site.

"Not only was intentional cranial deformation identified for the first time for this type of site, but also a variant with respect to the models recognized in Mesoamerica, not reported, until now, in the area," biological anthropologist Jesús Ernesto Velasco González said in a translated press statement. Velasco González noted that similar deformations occurred at the El Zapotal archaeological site in Veracruz, located further south along the Gulf of Mexico, so scientists tried to piece together potential migration leaks. However, those didn’t quite pan out.

"Stable oxygen isotope studies in collagen and bioapatite samples from bone and teeth, a technique used to infer the geographic origin of the second individual's skeletal remains, indicate that he was born, lived, and died in this part of the mountains," Velasco González said in a press statement. "Therefore, the results rule out a direct mobility relationship with the groups of El Zapotal or those further south."

The reasons why the people of Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica—or any people, for that matter—practiced skull formation are almost as varied as the people groups themselves. Sometimes it was a marker of social hierarchy, sometimes it was a religious rite, and sometimes it was just for aesthetics. Although the health effects are debated, it’s largely believed that this practice doesn’t decrease the size of the skull, and as such, health impacts are mostly negligible (though some research has asserted that the practice could impact cognitive or memory function).

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Why Are Dolphins Swimming with Orcas?

On: Thursday, January 8, 2026

Orcas
There is a pod of Pacific white-sided dolphins sighted off the coast of British Columbia cooperating with orcas, a traditional enemy that’s better known for taking out great white sharks than friendly interaction.

Scientists say they have documented the dolphins and a local population of killer whales known as Northern Resident orcas teaming up to hunt the orcas’ staple food: salmon. Though other groups of orcas feast on dolphins, Northern Residents do not. Still, it is the first time this type of cooperative behavior has been documented between the two marine mammals, researchers reported.

"Seeing them dive and hunt in sync with dolphins completely changes our understanding of what those encounters mean," said Sarah Fortune, Canadian Wildlife Federation chair in large whale conservation and an assistant professor in Dalhousie University’s oceanography department. Fortune was the lead author of the study, which published in the journal Scientific Reports.

To witness the dolphins and orcas interacting, the researchers captured drone footage as well as underwater video by attaching suction tags to the orcas that were equipped with cameras and hydrophones.

Their footage showed that the killer whales traveled toward the dolphins and followed them at the surface level. The underwater footage revealed that the killer whales were also following dolphins on their dives of up to 60 meters (197 feet), where the orcas were able to prey on Chinook salmon.

Though light levels are low at those depths, Fortune said cameras picked up the killer whales catching salmon, with clouds of blood billowing from their mouths, and hydrophones picked up the crunch of a kill.

To understand better what was happening, the researchers also eavesdropped on the echolocation clicks made by dolphins and orcas, which allow animals to navigate and sense their environment by listening to the returned echoes of the noises they make.

"We can look at the characteristics of these clicks to infer whether a whale is actively chasing a prey for a fish and also whether it may have caught the fish," Fortune said.

The researchers recorded 258 instances of dolphins and orcas interacting between 15 and 30 August 2020.

They found that all the whales that interacted with dolphins also engaged in killing, eating and searching for salmon.

Put together, the data Fortune and her colleagues collected suggested that the killer whales, fearsome predators able to take on great whites and whale sharks several times their size, were essentially using the dolphins as scouts.

"By hunting with other echolocating animals like the dolphins, they might be increasing their acoustic field of view, providing greater opportunity to detect where the salmon are. That’s sort of the prevailing thought here," she explained. Using dolphins in this way would also allow the orcas to conserve energy, with salmon often hiding at depths to try and avoid predators such as orcas.

But what do dolphins get out of the interactions?

The video Fortune and her colleagues collected showed that once the orcas caught their prey and shared it with the pod, the dolphins were quick to eat the leftovers.

But salmon isn’t a core part of a dolphin’s diet, so greater access to food likely wasn’t the sole motivation, Fortune said. By hanging out with the orcas, dolphins likely gain protection from other orca pods that pass through the area and hunt dolphins.

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Study Shows Underwater "Storms" Affecting Glacier

On: Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Underwater Storm
Swirling underwater "storms" are believed to have aggressively melted the ice shelves of two vital Antarctic glaciers, with potentially "far-reaching implications" for global sea level rise.

Antarctica is like a fist with a skinny thumb stuck out toward South America. Pine Island Glacier is near the base of this thumb. Thwaites — known as the Doomsday Glacier because of the devastating impact its demise would have on global sea level rise — sits next to it.

Over the past few decades, these icy giants have experienced rapid melting driven by warming ocean water, especially at the point where they rise from the seabed and come afloat as ice shelves.

The new study, published last month in Nature Geosciences, is the first to systematically analyze how the ocean is melting ice shelves over just hours and days, rather than seasons or years, its authors say.

"We are looking at the ocean on very short 'weather-like' timescales, which is unusual for Antarctic studies," said Yoshihiro Nakayama, a study author and an assistant professor of engineering at Dartmouth College.

The underwater storms they focused on — called submesoscales — are fast-changing, swirling ocean eddies.

"Think of these like little water twirls that spin around really fast, kind of like when you stir water in a cup," said study author Mattia Poinelli, an Earth system science researcher at the University of California, Irvine and a NASA research affiliate. However, in the ocean, these eddies are not small — they can span up to around 6 miles.

They form when warm and cold water meet. To return to the cup analogy, it’s the same principle as when you pour milk into a cup of coffee and see tiny swirls spinning around, mixing everything together.

The phenomenon is similar to how storms form in the atmosphere — when warm and cold air collide — and like atmospheric storms, they can be very dangerous.

The eddies spin up in the open ocean and race underneath ice shelves. Sandwiched between the complex, rough base of the ice shelf and the seafloor, the eddies churn up warmer water from deeper in the ocean, which enhances melting when it "hits" vulnerable ice, Nakayama said.

The scientists used computer models as well as real-world data from ocean instruments to analyze the impact of these underwater storms.

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