Articles for author: Trizzy Orozco

A row of salt domes next to a road.

The Salt Domes of the Gulf Coast: A Hidden World Below Our Feet

Trizzy Orozco

Imagine standing on a sunny shore along the Gulf Coast, toes buried in warm sand, seagulls calling overhead. Now, picture that beneath your feet, not far below the surface, lies a twisting, colossal structure made of pure salt—soaring almost as high as a skyscraper, yet totally invisible. These underground giants, known as salt domes, are ...

The Secret of Blue Holes: How These Underwater Caverns Hold Clues to Earth’s Past

Diving Into the World’s Deepest Underwater Caves

Trizzy Orozco

Imagine slipping beneath the water’s surface and descending into a silent world where sunlight never reaches, where every inch forward is a step into the unknown. The allure of deep underwater caves is both terrifying and irresistible. With every breath, explorers gamble with the mysteries lurking in total darkness—passages twisting like the veins of the ...

Fungi underground ecosystem

The Role of Fungi in Earth’s Ecosystems: The Underrated Kingdom

Trizzy Orozco

Fungi are everywhere, from the yeasts fermenting your bread and beer to the mushrooms in your salad. Despite their ubiquitous presence, fungi are often overlooked in discussions about the natural world. Their roles, however, are crucial to ecosystem balance and health. Understanding fungi’s contributions can unveil the mysteries of life cycles and biodiversity on a ...

La Brea Tar Pits.

Secrets of the Tar Pits: What Trapped Fossils Reveal About Earth’s Past

Trizzy Orozco

Discovering the secrets of Earth’s ancient history often feels like piecing together a grand puzzle laid over millennia. One of the most fascinating pieces of that puzzle is found in tar pits, where time has essentially stood still. Beneath the sticky surface lies evidence locked in a time capsule, offering invaluable insights into ecosystems that ...

A dirt road with mountains in the background.

The Oldest Roads in America Aren’t What You Think They Are

Trizzy Orozco

Imagine standing in the dappled light of a dense forest, feeling the crunch of leaves beneath your feet. You’re walking a path that’s older than every city in America, older than the United States itself. But this isn’t an old cobblestone street or a forgotten wagon trail—it’s something far more ancient and extraordinary. The oldest ...

Moss Campion: The Cushion of Life

The Plant That Traps Air for Warmth — And Lives on Frozen Mountains

Trizzy Orozco

Imagine standing on a windswept mountain ridge, the world below blanketed in shimmering snow, biting winds howling all around. Suddenly, you spot an emerald green cushion, almost like a secret garden nestled in the ice. This isn’t just any plant. It’s a marvel of nature—a living, breathing heater, defying the cold by trapping air for ...

Homo sapiens neanderthalensis-Jäger

Could We Reconstruct a Neanderthal Genome—And Should We?

Trizzy Orozco

Imagine standing face to face with a being both familiar and utterly alien—someone who once walked alongside our ancestors, sharing the same lands, living through the same storms, yet ultimately vanishing from the world. The Neanderthal, with its haunting gaze and robust frame, has become a symbol of our shared human story. But what if, ...

Tunnel teleportation action.

The Weirdest Scientific Breakthroughs That Sound Like Science Fiction

Trizzy Orozco

Imagine a world where science fiction isn’t confined to the pages of a novel or the screen of a movie. It’s a reality, and it’s unfolding right before our eyes. In laboratories across the globe, scientists are pushing the boundaries of what we consider possible, with breakthroughs that seem to leap right out of a ...