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JA Purity IV JA Purity IV
  • Top Stories
  • ENN Original
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Ecosystems
  • Pollution
  • Wildlife
  • Policy
  • More
    • Agriculture
    • Green Building
    • Sustainability
    • Business
  • Sci/Tech
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  • Press Releases
  • Tracking Raindrops, One Molecule at a Time

    New research, led by the University of Massachusetts Amherst, refines our understanding of the chemical traces that act as the rain’s fingerprint. 

  • Lower Than Normal Rainfall Linked With a Higher Chance of Food Insecurity

    Food insecurity is a growing problem in certain parts of the world, especially as climate change affects weather conditions around the globe. 

  • Climate Change is Closing Daily Temperature Gap, Clouds Could be the Cause

    Climate change is shrinking the difference between the daily high temperature and the daily low in many parts of the world. 

  • Different Blossoming Schedules Have Kept These Flowers From Driving Each Other Extinct

    A big part of evolution is competition-- when there are limited resources to go around, plants and animals have to duke it out for nutrients, mates, and places to live. 

  • Population Aging, Economic Status May Amplify Air Pollution Health Impacts

    Population aging and economic development setbacks may outpace the health benefits of less air pollution and slowed climate change, according to a Penn State-led researcher team examining air quality and the factors most likely to impact future premature deaths.

  • The Lightness of Water Vapor Adds Heft to Global Climate Models

    Clouds are notoriously hard to pin down, especially in climate science. 

  • Oxford-Led Study Finds Disease Outbreaks Influence the Colour of Wolves Across North America

    If you were to travel from Arctic Canada and head south down the Rocky Mountains into the US towards Mexico, the further south you go, the more black wolves there are.

  • U.S. Winter Outlook: Warmer, drier South with ongoing La Nina

    This year La Niña returns for the third consecutive winter, driving warmer-than-average temperatures for the Southwest and along the Gulf Coast and eastern seaboard, according to NOAA’s U.S.

  • Drought and Barge Backups on the Mississippi

    Water levels on the Mississippi River normally decline in the fall and winter, but not by nearly as much as they did in October 2022.

  • How Teamwork — In Nature and the Lab — Can Teach Us About Climate Change

    Michigan State University and the University of California, Merced are working to get a better handle on the huge problem of climate change with the help of some very small organisms.

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