Earth

  1. Earth

    Ocean’s carbon dioxide uptake varies year to year

    Data taken hourly by cargo ships show that how much of the greenhouse gas North Atlantic waters absorb varies more than thought.

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  2. Chemistry

    Pollutants: Up in flames

    Forest fires have the potential to release toxic industrial and agricultural pollutants previously trapped on soil. After glomming onto smoke particles, these chemicals can hitch long-distance rides — sometimes across oceans — before they’re grounded and contaminate some new region, scientists report.

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  3. Paleontology

    Major eruption cooled the climate but went unnoticed

    Ice-core records suggest that a major 1809 eruption cooled Earth even before the Tambora eruption and ‘the year without a summer’.

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  4. Ecosystems

    Dining: Bugged on Thanksgiving

    Earlier this week, I met with Zack Lemann at the Insectarium, a roughly 18-month-old Audubon museum. He gave me a behind-the-scenes tour of its dozens of living exhibits hosting insects and more -- including tarantulas and, arriving that day for their Tuesday debut, white (non-albino) alligators. But the purpose of my noon-hour visit was to sample the local cuisine and learn details of preparations for a holiday menu that would be offered through tomorrow at the facility’s experiential cafe: Bug Appetit. There’s Thanksgiving turkey with a cornbread and wax worm stuffing, cranberry sauce with meal worms, and Cricket Pumpkin Pie. It’s cuisine most Americans would never pay for. But at the Insectarium, they don’t have to. It’s offered free as part of an educational adventure.

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  5. Humans

    Beefy hormones: New routes of exposure

    On any given day, some 750,000 U.S feedlots are beefing up between 11 million and 14 million head of cattle. The vast majority of these animals will receive muscle-building steroids — hormones they will eventually excrete into the environment. But traditional notions about where those biologically active pollutants end up may need substantial revising, several new studies find.

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  6. Earth

    GPS bolsters view that big Cascadia quakes could hit inland

    Satellite tracking of plate movements shows that a magnitude-9 tremor in Pacific Northwest could strike close to urban areas.

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  7. Agriculture

    Nation by nation, evidence thin that boosting crop yields conserves land

    Intensifying agriculture may not necessarily return farmland to nature without policy help.

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  8. Earth

    Toxic playgrounds

    No kid should ever play in arsenic. Especially at school. Yet many probably do, according to findings of a study presented today.

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  9. Chemistry

    PCBs: When green paint isn’t ‘green’

    It seems we're literally painting the air -- from the Great Lakes to Antarctica -- with persistent pollutants. Including at least one whose safety has never been studied.

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  10. Chemistry

    Case of the toxic gingerbread man

    Featured blog: A search for the source of some indoor-air anomalies turns up a surprising culprit.

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  11. Earth

    Where humans go, pepper virus follows

    Plant pathogen could help track waters polluted with human waste.

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  12. Climate

    Climate might be right for a deal

    The upcoming Copenhagen negotiations will take steps toward an international, climate-stabilizing treaty.

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