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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
  • Dorian Likely to Cause Significant Beach Erosion from Fla. to N.C.

    U.S. Geological Survey coastal change experts have forecast that 78 percent of the sandy beaches from Florida to North Carolina are likely to undergo beach and dune erosion from the powerful storm.

  • USGS Deploying About 150 Storm-Tide Sensors in Carolinas

    U.S. Geological Survey scientists are quickly installing at least 150 storm-tide sensors [video] and at least 22 other instruments that will track the hurricane’s effects along the North and South Carolina coasts.

  • USF-Led Team Deciphers Sea Level Rise from the Last Time Earth’s CO2 Set Record Highs

    An international team of scientists have discovered evidence in the geological formations in a coastal cave showing that more than three million years ago – a time in which the Earth was two to three degrees warmer than the pre-industrial era – sea level was as much as 16 meters higher than the present day.

  • Native Birds in South Eastern Australia Worst Affected by Habitat Loss

    New research has found that habitat loss is a major concern for hundreds of Australian bird species, and south eastern Australia has been the worst affected.

  • Cleaning up Great Lakes Not Only Possible, but Good for the Economy

    In a summer characterized by toxic algae blooms and high levels of E. coli at Hamilton beaches, a McMaster engineering professor is a co-editor of a hopeful report that shows the economic and community benefits of addressing water pollution around the Great Lakes.

  • Pesticides Linked to Deaths of Millions of Bees in Brazil

    More than 500 million bees were found dead by beekeepers in Brazil over a three-month period earlier this year.

  • Undercover Evolution

    Providing a glimpse the hidden workings of evolution, a group of researchers at UC Santa Barbara have discovered that embryos that appear the same can start out with surprisingly different instructions.

  • Corals Take Control of Nitrogen Recycling

    Corals are shown to recycle their own waste ammonium using a surprising source of glucose—a finding that reveals more about the relationship between corals and their symbiotic algae.

  • Dense Antarctic Water Returning to the Atlantic

    The supply of dense Antarctic water from the bottom of the ocean to the Atlantic has declined in recent years. However, a new study explains for the first time how since 2014 this has stabilized and slightly recovered due to the variability in upstream dense waters, with implications for the global climate.

  • Oldest Lake in Europe Reveals More Than One Million Years of Climate History

    Results of large-scale research project spearheaded by geologists from the University of Cologne on Lake Ohrid’s climate history published in ‘Nature’.

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