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For Firefox users, there is media bias / propaganda / fact check plugin.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/media-bias-fact-check/
- Consider including the article’s mediabiasfactcheck.com/ link
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Seems monumental, I'm curious about more specific properties of the metal.
Seems like a valuable resource from a video game that charges science fiction energy drives.
It's funny the title is "defies knowledge of the deep ocean", given how often it's proven humans have so little knowledge of the deep ocean in the first place.
The article is being pretty hyperbolic. There's no mystery here, this is just something which happens if you put two different metals together. It's nothing more or less than a crude battery, just like the ancestors of the AA battery the article kept harping on about.
This discovery could be important for people studying the climate on very early Earth, people studying early life, and the ecology of the deep sea today.
That last one is particularly troubling, though. If this is widespread, then this might be a major source of what little oxygen is down there. If so, then taking those nodules away (like a lot of people are keen to do, since some of the metals they're made of are valuable) could destroy an entire ecosystem.
More research is required
Do you understand how the metal becomes a battery and how it can work consistently to split hydrogen and oxygen?
How it's naturally charged and recharged?
I would expect it to work like a galvanic anode.