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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
  • A New Model Could Help Stall Shifting Sand Dunes, Protecting Infrastructure and Ecosystems

    The team’s experiment – which featured mock-up obstacles of varying size and shape – shows that large obstacles are the most effective at halting the migration of a dune, especially when they are ridge-shaped, like a wall, rather than smooth and cylindrical, like a pipeline.

  • Erie Researchers Identify New Threat to American Chestnut Trees

    Penn State researcher has identified a new fungal threat to the American chestnut tree.

  • Thailand Swamped by Monsoon Flooding

    Recent storms added to an already heavy monsoon season.

  • Tiny Microscopic Hunters Could Be A Crystal Ball for Climate Change

    It’s hard to know what climate change will mean for Earth’s interconnected and interdependent webs of life. But one team of researchers at Duke University says we might begin to get a glimpse of the future from just a few ounces of microbial soup.

  • Permafrost Thaw Could Release Bacteria and Viruses

    When considering the implications of thawing permafrost, our initial worries are likely to turn to the major issue of methane being released into the atmosphere and exacerbating global warming or issues for local communities as the ground and infrastructure become unstable.

  • Project To Study Marine Life In Gulf Of Mexico Reefs

    Texas A&M-Galveston professor Jay Rooker will lead a $1.9 million effort to learn more about the Flower Garden Banks and the fish that inhabit the marine sanctuary.

  • Pro­jection of Extre­me Rain­fall Impro­ved

    Extreme events such as heavy rainfall will become more frequent and more intense in the future due to climate change.

  • Forest Farmers

    Planting trees to help Minnesota’s warming climate

  • Fungal Outbreak in Marine Mammals Began on Land

    How a deadly land fungus began killing marine mammals in the Salish Sea

  • No Silver Bullet

    There’s a widespread hypothesis that links the resilience of coral reefs with their remoteness from human activities — the farther away they are from people, the more likely corals are to bounce back from disturbances.

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