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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
  • Laser-Based Ice-Core Sampling for Studying Climate Change

    Researchers led by Yuko Motizuki from the Astro-Glaciology Laboratory at the RIKEN Nishina Center in Japan have developed a new laser-based sampling system for studying the composition of ice cores taken from glaciers. 

  • Argyle Study Reveals Crucial Third Clue to Finding New Diamond Deposits

    Curtin University researchers studying diamond-rich rocks from Western Australia’s Argyle volcano have identified the missing third key ingredient needed to bring valuable pink diamonds to the Earth’s surface where they can be mined, which could greatly help in the global hunt for new deposits.

  • Scientists Regenerate Neurons That Restore Walking in Mice After Paralysis From Spinal Cord Injury

    In a new study in mice, a team of researchers from UCLA, the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, and Harvard University have uncovered a crucial component for restoring functional activity after spinal cord injury.

  • How Climate Warming Could Disrupt a Deep-Rooted Relationship

    Researchers from Syracuse University and the University of Minnesota find that warming trends will likely result in major disturbances of networks of fungi potentially harming forest resilience.

  • Long-Lasting La Niña Events More Common Over Past Century

    Multiyear La Niña events have become more common over the last 100 years, according to a new study led by University of Hawai‘i (UH) at Mānoa atmospheric scientist Bin Wang.

  • Climate Change May Affect 40% of Biodiversity in Semi-Arid Portion of Brazil’s Northeast by 2060

    The consequences of climate change in the Caatinga, the semi-arid shrubland and thorn forest biome in Brazil’s Northeast region, will include species loss, substitution of rare plants by more generalist vegetation, biotic homogenization (in which previously distinct plant communities become progressively more similar), increasing aridity, and even desertification in some areas.

  • How Ancient Amazonians Locked Away Thousands of Tons of Carbon in “Dark Earth”

    A new study reveals how, by cultivating fertile soil for farming, ancient Amazonians locked away thousands of tons of carbon that have stayed in the ground for centuries.

  • Socially Vulnerable Populations are Disproportionately Exposed to Wildfires in the West, Study Finds

    People experiencing a high degree of social vulnerability are also more exposed to wildfires in Oregon and Washington as wildfire risk increases, a new study shows.

  • How to Tackle the Global Deforestation Crisis

    Imagine if France, Germany, and Spain were completely blanketed in forests — and then all those trees were quickly chopped down.

  • Urban Light Pollution Linked to Smaller Eyes in Birds

    The bright lights of big cities could be causing an evolutionary adaptation for smaller eyes in some birds, a new study indicates.

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