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  • Top Stories
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    • Agriculture
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  • 2018-2022 Expected to be Abnormally Hot Years

    This summer's world-wide heatwave makes 2018 a particularly hot year. As will be the next few years, according to a study led by Florian Sévellec, a CNRS researcher at the Laboratory for Ocean Physics and Remote Sensing (LOPS) (CNRS/IFREMER/IRD/University of Brest) and at the University of Southampton, and published in the 14 August 2018 edition of Nature Communications. Using a new method, the study shows that at the global level, 2018–2022 may be an even hotter period than expected based on current global warming.

  • New app for nature lovers helps create biodiversity network

    A new University of Alberta app is encouraging Albertans to get back to nature and talk about it.

  • Lakehead professor studied 1.4 billion-year-old rocks near Dorion to determine abundance of life on Earth

    A Lakehead University Geology professor is part of a team of researchers who collaborated on an article exploring oxygen and life on Earth.

  • Innovative research finds influenza detection system in body

    University of Saskatchewan researchers have found a unique “sensor” mechanism inside cells that enables the immune system to recognize influenza, a finding that may lead to improved vaccines in the future.

  • Melt-Rate of West Antarctic Ice Sheet Highly Sensitive to Changes in Ocean Temperatures

    Melting of ice shelves in West Antarctica speeds up and slows down in response to changes in deep ocean temperature, and is far more variable than previously thought, according to new research published this week in the journal Nature Geoscience.

  • Algorithm Provides Early Warning System for Tracking Groundwater Contamination

    Groundwater contamination is increasingly recognized as a widespread environmental problem. The most important course of action often involves long-term monitoring. But what is the most cost-effective way to monitor when the contaminant plumes are large, complex, and long-term, or an unexpected event such as a storm could cause sudden changes in contaminant levels that may be missed by periodic sampling?

  • NASA Finds Powerful Storms Over South China from Tropical Storm Bebinca

    Tropical Storm Bebinca formed quickly in the northern part of the South China Sea. Warnings were in effect as NASA's Aqua satellite analyzed the storm located off the coast of southern China near Hainan Island and found powerful storms capable of dropping heavy rainfall.

  • Europe Needs Coastal Adaptation Measures to Avoid Catastrophic Flooding by the End of the Century

    Without increased investment in coastal adaptation, the expected annual damage caused by coastal floods in Europe could increase from €1.25 billion today to between €93 billion and €961 billion by the end of the century.  

  • NASA-NOAA's Suomi NPP Satellite Finds a Weaker Tropical Storm Leepi

    NASA-NOAA's Suomi NPP satellite caught up with Typhoon Leepi in the open waters of the Northwestern Pacific Ocean and captured a visible image that showed the bulk of clouds were northeast of the center.

  • Report on Washington’s sea level rise gets boost from University of Oregon data

    To help project sea level rise along the Washington coastline in a newly released report, two University of Oregon researchers looked to the land.

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