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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
  • Health
  • Press Releases
  • Study Supports Stronger Conservation Efforts in Southeast Glacial Refugia Regions

    During the last ice age, glaciers covered vast portions of North America.

  • Sweet Spots in the Sea: Mountains of Sugar Under Seagrass Meadows

    Seagrass beds are un­derwater oases. Now researchers have discovered vast amounts of sugars underneath seagrass meadows. 

  • Changing Climate Impacts Biodiversity in Protected Areas Globally

    Protected areas — such as nature reserves, national parks, and wilderness areas — are essential to conserving biodiversity. 

  • Climate Resilient Microalgae Could Help Restore Coral Reefs

    Coral species exhibit different temperature tolerances. This is in part due to the composition of their microalgae symbionts. 

  • Finding Terra Incognita

    A combination of atmospheric measurements and fine-scale simulations has improved understanding of the modeling anomalies that arise when the model resolution approximates the length scale of turbulence features — an atmospheric simulation problem known as Terra Incognita. 

  • Ancient Oak Trees to Shed Light on the Climate of the Past 4500 Years

    Researchers will soon be able to reconstruct the climate of north-west Europe including the UK over the last 4500 years, and to date wooden buildings and objects more accurately, by analysing the chemistry of ancient oak trees, through a new Swansea-led project just selected for €3 million in European funding.

  • Environmental Helicity May Affect the Outer-Core Size of Tropical Cyclones

    The outer-core size of tropical cyclones (TCs) is vital for evaluating their destructive potential. 

  • Risk of Intense Tropical Cyclones Will Double by 2050

    Human-caused climate change will make strong tropical cyclones twice as frequent by the middle of the century, putting large parts of the world at risk, according to a new study published in Scientific Advances. 

  • Global Warming Accelerates the Water Cycle, With Relevant Climatic Consequences

    According to a new study led by the ICM-CSIC, this could lead to a destabilisation of the global climate system, an intensification of storms in specific areas, and an acceleration of ice melting at the poles.

  • Unchecked Global Emissions on Track to Initiate Mass Extinction of Marine Life

    As greenhouse gas emissions continue to warm the world’s oceans, marine biodiversity could be on track to plummet within the next few centuries to levels not seen since the extinction of the dinosaurs, according to a recent study in the journal Science by Princeton University researchers.

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