Search
Log in
Sign up
Watch fullscreen
Does The Earth Have A Pulse?
Live Science
Follow
Like
Bookmark
Share
Add to Playlist
Report
3 minutes ago
Most major geological events in Earth's recent history have clustered in 27.5-million-year intervals — a pattern that scientists call the "pulse of the Earth."
Category
🤖
Tech
Show less
Recommended
3:11
|
Up next
Curiosity Discovered Evidence Of Water On Ancient Mars
Space.com
6:34
Dinosaur Shrimp Emerges After Arizona Monsoon
Live Science
1:46
SpaceX Test-Fires Raptor Engine Into A Water Cooled Steel Plate
Space.com
1:24
Watch How ESA Juice Spacecraft's Antenna Was Released From The Mounting Bracket
Space.com
2:25
Advice On Large Money Inheritance
Kiplinger
1:45
10 Tips On How To Get Cheaper Motorcycle Insurance I Kiplinger
Kiplinger
2:21
What Is An Index Fund And How Does It Work?
Kiplinger
1:54
5 Tunes: Guitarists Need To Listen To By The Cure
Music Radar
1:48
5 Songs Guitarists Need To Hear By Jeff Beck
Music Radar
2:48
10 Greatest Synth Tracks 2002 - 2012
Music Radar
1:52
Vikings May Not Have Been Who We Thought They Were: Tall, Blonde, Or Scandinavian
Live Science
2:17
Discovery Of Fossilized Human Footprints In An Ancient Lakebed
Live Science
2:54
Looking Beyond Voyager 1 And 2
Live Science
4:15
Which Animals Will Survive Climate Change
Live Science
3:12
What is Quantum Mechanics?
Live Science
3:48
Hubble Studies Galaxy Lacking Dark Matter
Live Science
3:47
Will Brain Transplants Ever Be Possible?
Live Science
7:03
China's Artificial Sun
Live Science
1:39
Scientists Put Shrimp On A Treadmill
Live Science
2:53
Could The Sahara Ever Be A Green Savannah Again?
Live Science
1:23
Why Cheetahs Are So Fast?
Live Science
1:48
What Does Exercise Do To Your Brain?
Live Science
1:32
Knowledge : In Quantum Physics, More Than One Reality Exists
Live Science
3:52
Out of Africa Theory Changed
Live Science
1:26
Snake Species Found in Another Snake’s Stomach
Live Science