Antarctica's crimson waterfall is truly haunting, and very few people ever see it in person. Evie Carrick is a writer and editor who’s lived in five countries and visited well over 50. She now splits ...
It’s a striking feature that looks straight out of a winter horror movie. This week, we’re breaking down the science behind the aptly-named “Blood Falls” of Antarctica. * Not hard to see how it earned ...
Deep in the white continent, in the icy desert where the frigid summer wind whips at the snow and the midnight sun hangs low in the sky but never sets, a single splash of color draws the eye. A ...
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"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." Here’s what you’ll learn when you read this story: First discovered in 1911 by British geologist Thomas ...
In 1911, Australian geologist Thomas Griffith Taylor discovered the Blood Falls—an odd, blood-red flow of saltwater seeping out from the tip of East Antarctica. Researchers later confirmed the color ...
The Blood Falls seeps from the end of the Taylor Glacier into Lake Bonney in Antartica In the wilderness of Antarctica, where the landscape is stark and otherworldly, there exists a phenomenon so ...