A new study led by researchers at the University of Hawaii (UH) at Mānoa published in Nature Communications is the first of ...
A new study finds that deep-sea mining waste in the ocean’s twilight zone could disrupt food webs and starve midwater ...
Drilling for minerals deep in the ocean could have immense consequences on the tiny animals at the core of the vast ocean ...
A new study has found that deep-sea mining operations threaten ocean food chains, potentially impacting valuable fisheries.
The research shows sediment waste discharged from deep sea mining could disrupt marine life in the mid-water, between 200-1500 meters deep, known as the "twilight zone".
Scientists caution that unchecked mining could disrupt ocean food webs from the depths to dinner plates worldwide.
The twilight zone hosts a diversity of life - including tiny krill, fish, squid, octopus and gelatinous species such as ...
New research from University of Hawai‘i at Manoa warns that particle plumes from Pacific mining operations could starve ...
New industry-backed research shows how waste from deep-sea mining could have far-reaching effects on fish and their food.
Eloise McMinn Mitchell, Flyability, Switzerland, explores the applications of drones in underground mining.