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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
  • Towards a Better Understanding of Societal Responses to Climate Change

    As the signs of today’s human-caused climate change become ever more alarming, research into the ways past societies responded to natural climate changes is growing increasingly urgent.

  • Once-in-a-Century UK Wildfire Threats Could Happen Most Years by End of Century

    Extremely hot and dry conditions that currently put parts of the UK in the most severe danger of wildfires once a century could happen every other year in a few decades’ time due to climate change, new research has revealed.

  • Extreme Temperatures, Heat Stress and Forced Migration

    The Middle East and North Africa Region (MENA) is a climate change hot spot where summers warm much faster than in the rest of the world. 

  • Precipitation Caused Maximum Advance of Alpine Glaciers

    The last glacial period, which lasted about 100,000 years, reached its peak about 20,000 to 25,000 years ago: Huge ice sheets covered large parts of northern Europe, North America and northern Asia, some of them kilometres thick, and the sea level was about 125 metres below today's level. 

  • Engineering of the Mississippi River has Kept Carbon Out of the Atmosphere, According to New Study

    A new study co-authored by a Tulane University geoscientist shows that human efforts to tame the Mississippi River may have had an unintended positive effect: more rapid transport of carbon to the ocean.

  • Intensity of Phytoplankton Production During Antarctic Summer Affects the Structure of Seafloor Ecosystems

    Understanding the evolution of the polar sea ice is not enough to study the effects of the climate change on marine ecosystems in Antarctic seafloors.

  • What Early-budding Trees Tell Us About Genetics, Climate Change

    One of the surest signs of spring is the vibrantly lime-green tinge trees develop as their buds open and tiny new leaves unfurl. 

  • Energizing India

    The world needs more electricity. As populations grow, standards of living increase and more people gain access to modern conveniences, countries will need to expand their energy generation capacity.

  • The Path Forward for Fossil Fuel Divestment

    After eight months of research, deliberation, discussion and numerous town halls, the Academic Senate Ad Hoc Committee on Divestment and Strategic Reinvestment Investigations has published a preliminary draft report detailing recommendations for the University of Utah to divest its holdings in the fossil fuel industry and reinvest in renewable resources.

  • Arctic Methane Release Due to Melting Ice is Likely to Happen Again

    Beneath the cold, dark depths of the Arctic ocean sit vast reserves of methane.

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