Dante’s vision of Hell may echo the physics of a massive asteroid strike, offering a new way to read the Inferno.
A provocative new study suggests Dante’s Inferno may have secretly doubled as a giant cosmic impact scenario centuries before ...
Dante’s iconic 14th-century poem may have been inspired by asteroid impact - Researcher says Satan’s impact in Dante’s ...
Scientists have confirmed a massive impact crater, Nadir Crater, hidden beneath the Atlantic Ocean off West Africa using ...
When atmospheric chemists Paul Crutzen and John Birks added smoke into their computer models of nuclear war scenarios, they ...
Long before telescopes revealed an unruly Solar System, Dante Alighieri imagined something terrible falling from the heavens. In his 14th-century Inferno, the falling object was Lucifer, the Lord of ...
Dante’s Inferno may have been far more than a religious epic. New research argues that the 14th-century poet essentially ...
Dante's Inferno describes Hell as a vast, inverted conical pit beneath the Earth's surface, narrowing downward through nine ...
Researchers from Marshall University reexamine the Divine Comedy through the lens of cosmic collision physics and conclude ...
A new scientific study is reigniting interest in The Divine Comedy by proposing that Dante Alighieri may have imagined concepts similar to modern planetary impact science more than 500 years before ...
What if Dante’s Inferno wasn’t just poetry? New research suggests the 14th-century epic may have quietly mapped the mechanics of a planetary impact, centuries before modern meteoritics existed. Vienna ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results