A new theory suggests that liquid carbon dioxide rivers, not water, could have helped shape the surface of Mars.
Scientists are rethinking a long-held belief that the liquid responsible for shaping Mars' surface must have been water.
The new technique begins with large blooms of microscopic plants called phytoplankton. These phytoplankton blooms remove ...
Spokane's CarbonQuest is partnering with Iceland-based Carbfix, a global leader in carbon storage, to deploy their climate ...
OSU scientists enhanced a MOF’s carbon capture capacity by over 100% using ammonia gas, creating a stable, energy-efficient ...
ORNL researchers created a durable zeolite catalyst that converts methane and carbon dioxide into syngas without degradation ...
Waste to wealth and combating climate change, a win-win laboratory scale solution has been developed by scientists at the ...
The shift from storing carbon dioxide to releasing it could have widespread implications for climate change, according to ...
Rocks play a vital yet often unrecognized role in the carbon cycle. Through a natural process that has helped regulate ...
The Welch Foundation, one of the nation’s leading private funders of basic chemistry research, has awarded the 2025 Norman ...