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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
  • Tiny Beetles a Bellwether of Ecological Disruption by Climate Change

    As species across the world adjust where they live in response to climate change, they will come into competition with other species that could hamper their ability to keep up with the pace of this change, according to new CU Boulder-led research.

  • New Data Points to Rising Freshwater Temperatures as a Cause of Chinook Salmon Decline

    For the last decade, chinook salmon, commonly known in Alaska as “king salmon,” has been in decline, a trend that has stumped researchers and biologists across the state as to what is causing the salmon’s low returns.

  • Plant Scientists Develop Model for Identifying Lentil Varieties Best Suited to Climate Change Impacts

    With demand for lentils growing globally and climate change driving temperatures higher, a University of Saskatchewan (USask)-led international research team has developed a model for predicting which varieties of the pulse crop are most likely to thrive in new production environments

  • When in Drought, Build Resilience

    After a dry summer and despite a few recent rainy days, Connecticut is experiencing an increasingly dry autumn, with areas of the state ranging from abnormally dry to extreme drought conditions.

  • New Technology Uses NOAA Data to Provide Faster Disaster Warnings

    Mayday.ai applies artificial intelligence to NOAA satellite imagery to detect natural disasters, starting with wildfires.

  • NOAA Concludes Hydrographic Survey Response Following Hurricane Delta

    This week NOAA’s Office of Coast Survey concluded its hydrographic survey response following Hurricane Delta.

  • Mathematical Tools Measure If Wave-Energy Devices Will Stay Afloat

    A new set of analytical techniques developed by Texas A&M researchers can help predict if wave-energy devices will capsize in rapidly changing ocean environments.

  • Arctic Ocean Sediments Reveal Permafrost Thawing During Past Climate Warming

    Sea floor sediments of the Arctic Ocean can help scientists understand how permafrost responds to climate warming.

  • Long-Term Data Show a Recent Acceleration in Chemical and Physical Changes in the Ocean

    New research published in Nature Communications Earth & Environment uses data from two sustained open-ocean hydrographic stations in the North Atlantic Ocean near Bermuda to demonstrate recent changes in ocean physics and chemistry since the 1980s.

  • NASA Supercomputing Study Breaks Ground for Tree Mapping, Carbon Research

    Scientists from NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, and international collaborators demonstrated a new method for mapping the location and size of trees growing outside of forests, discovering billions of trees in arid and semi-arid regions and laying the groundwork for more accurate global measurement of carbon storage on land.

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