All life forms — humans, animals, plants, even viruses — find a way to adapt in response to the ecosystems they call home. On average, most species exist on earth for between two and 10 million years.
BREWING OPPORTUNITY: Pictured from left, Deep Time coffee roaster Timothy "GA" Underwood, café worker Shilone and founder Dustin Mailman are part of the team working to create quality drinks and offer ...
Of the 700 specimens that roam the Smithsonian’s new Hall of Fossils, these six standout dinosaurs make a big impression Maddie Burakoff When the Smithsonian’s new Hall of Fossils—Deep Time exhibition ...
The Dinosaur Hall was originally called the “Hall of Extinct Monsters” (seen here in a photograph from the 1930s) when the Natural History Museum opened in 1910. Photo courtesy of Smithsonian Archives ...
ABC Kids Early Education is proud to support the launch of Deep Time, an ABC News Story Lab project. Deep Time brings to life the awe-inspiring ancient story of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait ...
Humans have long explored three big scientific questions: evolution of the universe, evolution of Earth, and evolution of life. Geoscientists have embraced the mission of elucidating the evolution of ...
Many exhibitions about the evolution of life tend to open with abstract concepts: the chemical formula for life or primordial microbes that lived in shallow seas. But the “Deep Time” designers wanted ...
Time rules our lives. We wake, eat, work, and sleep on the clock. Our days unfold in a standardized symphony of alarm clocks, school buzzers, and meeting timers. Meanwhile, global positioning ...
We pay our respects to all the knowledge holders who participated in the project, as well as all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and their ancestors, and we acknowledge their continuous ...
Looking for where to watch 'Deep Time' at home? Check out platforms and services with rental, purchase, and subscription options, so you can find the right fit. In the US, you can currently rent, buy, ...
The Texan duo changes its name from Yellow Fever, trading in nursery rhymes for scene kids for a deliberately small, dark take on post-punk. And it suits them. Much of what makes Deep Time feel like ...