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JA Purity IV JA Purity IV
  • Top Stories
  • ENN Original
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Ecosystems
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  • Policy
  • More
    • Agriculture
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    • Sustainability
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  • Sci/Tech
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  • Positive, Negative or Neutral, It All Matters: NASA Explains Space Radiation

    Charged particles may be small, but they matter to astronauts. NASA’s Human Research Program (HRP) is investigating these particles to solve one of its biggest challenges for a human journey to Mars: space radiation and its effects on the human body.

  • Researchers Discover New Cattle Disease and Prevent It from Spreading

    Within Danish cattle breeding the semen of one breeding bull is used to inseminate a lot of cows. Due to the many inseminations one bull can thus father thousands of calves. Therefore, it is vital to determine whether breeding bulls carry hereditary diseases.

  • Scientists and Farmers Work Together to Wipe Out African Lovegrass

    A partnership between QUT, the NSW Government and farmers could lead to the eventual eradication of the highly invasive African lovegrass which is threatening pastures and native grasslands Australia-wide.

  • Green Algae Could Hold Clues for Engineering Faster-Growing Crops

    Two new studies of green algae — the scourge of swimming pool owners and freshwater ponds — have revealed new insights into how these organisms siphon carbon dioxide from the air for use in photosynthesis, a key factor in their ability to grow so quickly. Understanding this process may someday help researchers improve the growth rate of crops such as wheat and rice.

  • Going Diving in the Tropics? Don't Eat the Reef Fish!

    Reducing tourist consumption of reef fish is critical for Palau’s ocean sustainability, finds a new Nippon Foundation-UBC Nereus Program study published today in Marine Policy.

  • NASA Sees Large Tropical Storm Jose Doing a "Sit and Spin" off the Massachusetts Coast

    Tropical Storm Jose continued to spin south of Massachusetts when NASA's Aqua satellite flew overhead from space and captured an image of the large storm that hasn't moved much.

  • Controlling problem ice — by cracking it

    Scientists and engineers have been waging a quiet but determined battle against an unlikely problem: the build-up of ice on different structures.

  • Bio-inspired approach to RNA delivery

    By delivering strands of genetic material known as messenger RNA (mRNA) into cells, researchers can induce the cells to produce any protein encoded by the mRNA. This technique holds great potential for administering vaccines or treating diseases such as cancer, but achieving efficient delivery of mRNA has proven challenging.

  • NASA Finds Very Heavy Rainfall in Hurricane Maria

    NASA looked into Hurricane Maria and found that powerful convective storms within the hurricane were dropping heavy rainfall. Maria brought that heavy rainfall to Puerto Rico and made landfall on Sept. 20 at 6:15 a.m. EDT.

  • Wave Glider surfs across stormy Drake Passage in Antarctica

    The Southern Ocean is key to Earth’s climate, but the same gusting winds, big waves and strong currents that are important to ocean physics make it perilous for oceanographers.

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