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  • Top Stories
  • ENN Original
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Ecosystems
  • Pollution
  • Wildlife
  • Policy
  • More
    • Agriculture
    • Green Building
    • Sustainability
    • Business
  • Sci/Tech
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  • Press Releases
  • Scientists Turn to Deep Learning to Improve Air Quality Forecasts

    Air pollution from the burning of fossil fuels impacts human health but predicting pollution levels at a given time and place remains challenging, according to a team of scientists who are turning to deep learning to improve air quality estimates. 

  • Study Reveals Uncertainty in How Much Carbon the Ocean Absorbs Over Time

    The ocean’s “biological pump” describes the many marine processes that work to take up carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and transport it deep into the ocean, where it can remain sequestered for centuries.

  • Plants Play Leading Role in Cycling Toxic Mercury Through the Environment

    Researchers studying mercury gas in the atmosphere with the aim of reducing the pollutant worldwide have determined a vast amount of the toxic element is absorbed by plants, leading it to deposit into soils.

  • In Europe, a Backlash Is Growing Over Incinerating Garbage

    For decades, Europe has poured millions of tons of its trash into incinerators each year, often under the green-sounding label “waste to energy.”

  • Thicker-Leaved Tropical Plants May Flourish Under Climate Change, Which Could be Good News for Climate

    How plants will fare as carbon dioxide levels continue to rise is a tricky problem and, researchers say, especially vexing in the tropics. Some aspects of plants’ survival may get easier, some parts will get harder, and there will be species winners and losers.

  • Study Details How Middle East Dust Intensifies Summer Monsoons on Indian Subcontinent

    New research from the University of Kansas published in Earth-Science Reviews offers insight into one of the world’s most powerful monsoon systems: the Indian summer monsoon. 

  • Seagrasses Turn Back the Clock on Ocean Acidification

    Spanning six years and seven seagrass meadows along the California coast, a paper from the University of California, Davis, is the most extensive study yet of how seagrasses can buffer ocean acidification.

  • The Oil Well Next Door: California’s Silent Health Hazard

    Nalleli Cobo was nine years old when her nose started bleeding, off and on throughout the day, and often into her pillow at night.

  • New Study Reveals Large and Unequal Health Burden From Air Pollution in California’s Bay Area

    New research published today in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives from Environmental Defense Fund and the George Washington University shows air pollution takes an enormous toll on health in the San Francisco Bay Area, and the impacts vary dramatically within neighborhoods.

  • Carbon-Neutral “Biofuel” from Lakes

    Lakes store huge amounts of methane. In a new study, environmental scientists at the University of Basel offer suggestions for how it can be extracted and used as an energy source in the form of methanol.

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