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  1. An ancient Earth impact could help in the search for Martian life

    Jul 9, 2025 · Strange cone-shaped rocks led scientists to the hidden remains of one of Earth’s oldest asteroid impacts. It could help us find fossil life on Mars.

  2. Earth’s ancient ‘greenhouse’ conditions were hotter than thought

    Sep 19, 2024 · A timeline of 485 million years of Earth’s surface temperatures shows ancient greenhouse conditions were hotter than scientists thought.

  3. Earth’s oldest rocks may be at least 4.16 billion years old

    Jun 26, 2025 · Earth’s oldest rocks may be at least 4.16 billion years old An unconventional dating method aims to settle a dispute over the age of some Canadian rocks

  4. NASA’s Perseverance rover found a new potential setting for …

    Dec 12, 2024 · A new potential setting for Martian life Ancient rocks weren’t all that Perseverance found in the Pico Turquino Hills.

  5. Ancient rocks reveal when rivers began pouring nutrients into the …

    Jan 31, 2025 · Rivers began pumping weathered material into the sea about a billion years after Earth formed, suggesting continents may have gotten an early start.

  6. Life’s early traces - Science News

    Jan 24, 2014 · Tiny tufts, rolls and crinkles in 3.5-billion-year-old rocks add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that cellular life got a relatively quick start on Earth.

  7. NASA's Perseverance finds its first possible hint of ancient Mars life

    Jul 25, 2024 · The NASA Mars rover examined a rock containing organic compounds and “leopard spots” that, on Earth, are associated with microbial life.

  8. Freshwater first appeared on Earth 4 billion years ago, ancient ...

    Jun 3, 2024 · Oxygen ratios in ancient zircon crystals suggest that the planet’s water cycle got started hundreds of millions of years earlier than thought.

  9. Before altering the air, microbes oxygenated large swaths of the sea

    May 7, 2025 · Ancient oxygen-making microbes may have oxygenated large swaths of Earth’s seafloor hundreds of millions of years before the element filled the atmosphere.

  10. Roughly 90 million years ago, a rainforest grew in Antarctica

    Apr 1, 2020 · A forest flourished within 1,000 kilometers of the South Pole, probably because of high atmospheric carbon dioxide levels and an ice-free Antarctica.