It’s a new species, discovered 2.3 miles under the sea It’s a new species, discovered 2.3 miles under the sea is a senior reporter who has covered AI, robotics, and more for eight years at The Verge.
Jellyfish don’t have a brain or a heart or blood and can’t see or hear and yet they’ve managed to stick around in our oceans for 600 million years and have survived five mass extinctions. These ...
Jellyfish hold a peculiar position in the hierarchy of animal charisma. On the one hand, they have a hypnotic elegance as they pulsate through the sea, bringing to mind ballerinas with tentacle tutus, ...
Overfishing, plastic pollution, warming temperatures and other impacts of human activities are changing the oceans — resulting in decreasing populations of everything from tuna to whales to dolphins.
Early in June the St. Johns Riverkeeper reported someone seeing “jellyfish” in the St. Johns River near Switzerland Point and sent a picture to support the observation. The “jellyfish” was actually a ...
PIC BY JORDI BENITEZ/CATERS NEWS – (PICTURED: One of the beautiful jellyfish) – So this is what lies beneath! These amazing photos of jellyfish are both amazing and slightly unnerving… Jordi Benitez / ...
A cosmic jellyfish floats through the sea in a new video from an underwater robotic craft tasked with exploring the deep ocean off the coast of American Samoa and Samoa. The Okeanos Explorer ship — ...
This “stunningly beautiful” jellyfish was discovered during a dive by the NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration and Research on April 24, 2016. The jellyfish, called hydromedusa, was found in the Enigma ...
Divers often come across weird, unexpected things. It’s not always a good idea to investigate up close. But when John Roney saw a tentacle just above him, he had to see what was happening. “Several ...
There’s a lot we don’t know about the deep ocean, and just as we send ships into space to discover what’s above us, vessels dive into the Earth’s watery depths to uncover what lies below. Take this ...
While typically found in warmer ocean waters, a brilliant blue jellyfish-like creature has been washing up on Jersey Shore beaches over the past week. The Velella velella jellies, also known as ...