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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
  • In the Treetops: USU Ecology Doctoral Student Studies Canopy Soil Abundance, Chemistry

    When we think of soil, most of us think of dirt on the ground. 

  • The History and Future of Ancient Einkorn Wheat Is Written in Its Genes

    An international team of researchers led by UMD scientists have sequenced the complete genome for einkorn wheat, the world’s first domesticated crop and traced its evolutionary history. 

  • Cal Poly Study Analyzes Nearshore California Marine Heat Waves and Cold Spells Amid Changing Climate Conditions

    Cal Poly student and faculty researchers, in conjunction with a team on the East Coast, are exploring how climate change is impacting extreme ocean temperatures off California’s Central Coast.

  • Fanning the Flames

    As Canadian wildfire smoke continues to impact large swaths of the United States, resulting in poor air quality and negative health outcomes for millions of Americans, more people than ever are feeling the effects of longer fire seasons and a changing climate.

  • Nearly Two-Thirds of All Species Live in the Ground, Scientists Estimate

    Soils are more rich in life than coral reefs or rainforest canopies, providing a home to nearly two-thirds of all species, according to a sprawling new analysis.

  • New Antarctic Extremes ‘Virtually Certain’ as World Warms

    Extreme events in Antarctica such as ocean heatwaves and ice loss will almost certainly become more common and more severe, researchers say.

  • Climate Change May Cause Disruptions to Solar Generation in the Future, Modelling Suggests

    New research shows Australia will need to adapt to changes in sudden solar power fluctuation events over the next century.

  • Invasion of plankton species reveals a seasonally ice-free Arctic ocean during the Last Interglacial

    A subpolar species associated with Atlantic water expanded far into the Arctic Ocean during the Last Interglacial, analysis of microfossil content of sediment cores reveals.

  • New Photocatalytic System Converts Carbon Dioxide to Valuable Fuel More Efficiently Than Natural Photosynthesis

    A joint research team from City University of Hong Kong (CityU) and collaborators recently developed a stable artificial photocatalytic system that is more efficient than natural photosynthesis. 

  • Past Climate Warming Driven by Hydrothermal Vents

    An international drilling expedition off the Norwegian coast led by Christian Berndt, Professor of Marine Geophysics at GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research in Kiel, and Sverre Planke, Professor of Marine Geophysics at the University of Oslo, confirms the theory that methane emissions from hydrothermal vents were responsible for global warming about 55 million years ago. 

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