Earth

  1. Earth

    Icebergs can be biological hot spots

    Icebergs carry nutrients from the land and shed them into the sea, nourishing life in the frigid waters near Antarctica.

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  2. Earth

    Double-acting bacteria immobilize toxic nanoparticles

    Bacteria lurking in the bowels of an abandoned Wisconsin mine might help remove toxic metals from polluted water.

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  3. Earth

    A Gemstone’s Wild Ride

    Diamonds may be carried to the surface in explosions of gas and rock fizzing up from deep within Earth's mantle.

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  4. Earth

    Tree rings tell tale of megadroughts

    Tree rings in ancient timber show that the Colorado Plateau experienced a 60-year drought in the 12th century.

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  5. Earth

    Storm Center

    Scientists aboard planes that flew into the cores of Katrina and other hurricanes in 2005 collected unprecedented data on the structure and development of the massive storms.

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  6. Earth

    Trouble for forests of the northern U.S. Rockies?

    Climate change over the coming decades may cause forests in northern portions of the U.S. Rockies to stop absorbing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and instead become net emitters of the gas.

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  7. Earth

    Darker days during Arctic summer

    Satellite observations indicate that Arctic regions reflected less sunlight into space in the summer of 2006 than in other recent years, a change that may exacerbate the warming of Earth's climate.

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  8. Earth

    Dust Bowl affected midwestern climate

    During the Dust Bowl of the 1930s, immense clouds of airborne soil blocked so much sunlight that much of the Great Plains region was significantly cooler than normal during summer months.

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  9. Earth

    Age and gender affect soot’s toxic impact

    Except in young females, small blood vessels in rodents lost the ability to precisely regulate blood flow after exposure to an oily constituent of diesel soot.

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  10. Earth

    Wildfire, Walleyes, and Wine

    An international panel's latest report on the impacts of climate change highlights an overlooked need: preparing for droughts, floods, heat waves, and other disasters.

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  11. Earth

    Storm Norms: Caribbean corals and sediments yield clues to hurricane frequency

    The recent increase in hurricane activity in the North Atlantic, a phenomenon that some scientists blame on climate change, actually reflects a return to normal after a lull in the 1970s and 1980s.

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  12. Earth

    Guidelines for wind farms

    National policies to maximize the benefits of wind farms while lessening their environmental impacts may be needed.

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