(PhysOrg.com) -- Sedimentary rocks created more than 2.4 billion years ago sometimes have an unusual sulfur isotope composition thought to be caused by the action of ultra violet light on volcanically ...
Ancient sediments that once resided on a lake bed and the ocean floor show sulfur isotope ratios unlike those found in other samples from the same time, calling into question accepted ideas about when ...
Analyses of ancient sulfide minerals and the modern organisms that create sulfides are giving scientists a better idea of what Earth’s atmosphere and oceans may have been like billions of years ago.
A breakthrough strategy using sulfur-rich precursors to engineer porous heterojunctions has overcome critical bottlenecks in water-splitting catalysts, paving the way for green hydrogen production.
Sedimentary rocks created more than 2.4 billion years ago sometimes have an unusual sulfur isotope composition thought to be caused by the action of ultra violet light on volcanically produced sulfur ...
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