Exclusive photos reveal a sprawling, 300-year-old coral near Solomon Islands, recently discovered by the National Geographic ...
The "mega" coral is 112-feet wide, 105-feet long and 18-feet high, making it larger than a blue whale, the world's largest ...
The behemoth coral, discovered in October in the Solomon Islands, is longer than a blue whale and older than the United States.
The gigantic standalone coral is about 600 feet in circumference and has grown uninterrupted for three centuries, according to National Geographic Society.
Scientists say coral ‘pulsing with life and colour’ is 300 years old and three times larger than previous record holder.
It’s more than 100 feet long, around 300 years old, made of nearly 1 billion little polyps and visible from space ...
National Geographic scientists say they’ve discovered the world’s largest coral near the remote Solomon Islands in the Pacific Ocean — an undersea mass that is so big, it can be seen from space.
The coral colony, of the species Pavona clavus, measuring 34 meters wide and 32 meters long, grew over three centuries and is visible from space. A team of scientists, including some Spaniards, has ...
Discovered in the Three Sisters island group by members of the National Geographic Pristine Seas team during their scientific ...
For centuries, an extraordinary coral lay hidden beneath the Pacific Ocean’s surface near the Solomon Islands, growing ...
Scientists aboard a National Geographic research vessel have uncovered the world’s largest known coral in the southwest ...