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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
  • New Potato-Threatening Pathogens Reported for First Time in Pennsylvania, US

    As the home of beloved snack companies like Martin’s Potato Chips, Utz and Snyder’s of Hanover, Pennsylvania values its potatoes.

  • Major Research Investment into National Land Use Transformation to Help the UK Achieve Net Zero

    University of Exeter experts are working to bridge the gap between science and policy to achieve net zero as part of a major new research project.

  • The Beleaguered Whitebark Pine Is in Trouble. Can It Be Saved?

    Sitting atop the highest slopes in western North America, the whitebark pine has adapted to the continent’s harshest growing conditions.

  • Cobalt-Free Batteries Could Power Cars of the Future

    Many electric vehicles are powered by batteries that contain cobalt — a metal that carries high financial, environmental, and social costs.

  • A New, Rigorous Assessment of OpenET Accuracy for Supporting Satellite-Based Water Management

    A new study offers a comprehensive multi-model, large-scale accuracy assessment of an operational satellite-based data system to compute evapotranspiration. 

  • Stalagmites as Climate Archive

    When combined with data from tree-ring records, stalagmites can open up a unique archive to study natural climate fluctuations across hundreds of years, a research team including geoscientists from Heidelberg University and the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology have demonstrated. 

  • Scientists Name the Most Common Tropical Tree Species

    A major international collaboration of 356 scientists led by UCL researchers has found almost identical patterns of tree diversity across the world’s tropical forests.

  • Rain Can Spoil a Wolf Spider’s Day, Too

    If you hate the rain, you have something in common with wolf spiders.

  • Climate Change Isn’t Producing Expected Increase in Atmospheric Moisture Over Dry Regions

    The laws of thermodynamics dictate that a warmer atmosphere can hold more water vapor, but new research has found that atmospheric moisture has not increased as expected over arid and semi-arid regions of the world as the climate has warmed.

  • The Heat is on: UMass Amherst Scientists Discover Southern Africa’s Temps Will Rise Past the Rhinos’ Tolerance

    Southern Africa contains the vast majority of the world’s remaining populations of both black and white rhinoceroses (80% and 92%, respectively).

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