Modeling broader effects of wildfires in Siberia - EurekAlert

Modeling broader effects of wildfires in Siberia

Early humans spread as far north as Siberia 400,000 years ago

Global Implications: More Aerosol Particles Than Thought Are Forming Over Siberia

Mystery of Siberia's giant exploding craters may finally be solved

Mysterious Giant Exploding Craters in Siberia May Finally Be Explained

Siberia’s mysterious exploding craters may be caused by hot gas

More aerosol particles than thought are forming over Siberia, study finds

World's oldest known fort was constructed by hunter-gatherers 8,000 years ago in Siberia

Pollen analysis suggests peopling of Siberia and Europe by modern humans occurred during a major Pleistocene warming spell

A Drone Flew Into Siberia's 'Doorway to The Underworld' And The Footage Is Epic

Ancient Americans Crossed Back into Siberia in a Two-Way Migration, New Evidence Shows

Native Americans—and their genes—traveled back to Siberia, new genomes reveal

Scientists Revived Ancient 'Zombie Viruses' Frozen For Eons in Siberia

Neil Armstrong while in the USSR collected a handful of soil from outside a Ukrainian man's house in Siberia to acknowledge that man's contribution to Apollo-11 Moon Mission

2,500-year-old burial mound found in Siberia's 'Valley of the Kings'

Scorching Heat in Siberia and Europe – Record Low Ice Coverage in Arctic Ocean’s Laptev Sea

Unique Gut Bug Study Untangles Early Human Migration From Siberia Into The Americas

Scientists have discovered that Arctic rotifers, which are microscopic organisms, have lived in Siberia’s permafrost for 24,000 years. Arctic rotifers, along with other animals like tardigrades and wood frogs, are some of the animals that can survive the harshest environments on planet Earth.

Bdelloid rotifer survives 24,000 years frozen in Siberia