In Chile’s Atacama Desert, scientists discovered that suspended mesh nets can capture meaningful fog water — enough to help ...
Let's talk about what it feels like to be over 15,000 feet high, because honestly, we're (humans) not meant to be up there ...
Travel + Leisure on MSN
The Driest Desert in the World Has Stunning Salt Flats, Epic Stargazing, and Scenic Trails
Here's how to plan a trip to Chile's Atacama Desert, with expert recommendations on where to stay, what to do, and the best ...
Discover Magazine on MSN
Unusual snowfall shuts down one of Earth’s most advanced telescopes in the Atacama Desert
Learn more about the snowfall that shut down ALMA in the Atacama desert, and how researchers worry this could be a sign of ...
2004-02-01 04:00:00 PDT San Pedro de Atacama, Chile-- If I wanted to enter the crystal canyon, I was going to have to jump off the edge of a 300-foot-high dune. Jorge, our guide, threw himself down ...
Live Science on MSN
Rare dusting of snow covers one of the driest places on Earth and shuts down massive radio telescope — Earth from space
A satellite photo from July shows intricate snowy stripes painted across the Atacama Desert in Chile. The icy weather temporarily put the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) ...
A dusting of snow blanketed Chile’s Atacama Desert, one of the driest places on Earth. Scientists captured this unusual event, sparking curiosity worldwide.
Instruments like the those currently on the Red Planet were used to study samples collected from an 'Mars-like' area in Chile ...
Water may be an essential element of life, but to the scarce microbes that inhabit the Mars-like Atacama Desert in Chile, it's death. Studying the effects of once-in-a-century rainfall in the ...
The rain fell in the Atacama Desert in Chile for the first time in hundreds of years, and it caused a mass extinction. It might seem natural to think that such rains would be followed by blooming ...
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