Earth

  1. Earth

    Fast-food flies ferry foul fauna

    Houseflies buzzing around fast-food restaurants could be spreading antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

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  2. Earth

    Asian sediments betray age of nearby desert

    Grains of silt embedded in thick sediments of northwestern China may settle a debate about the age of the Taklimakan Desert.

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  3. Earth

    Dirty Little Secret

    Recognition is growing that many communities have soils laced with asbestos, which has prodded several federal agencies to probe the hazards they might pose.

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  4. Earth

    Toxic Leftovers: Microbes convert flame retardant

    Bacteria can break down a common flame retardant into more-toxic forms.

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  5. Earth

    Something’s fishy about these hormones

    Synthetic steroids used to beef up cattle can impair reproduction in female fish and even give them macho physical traits.

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  6. Earth

    Main source of airborne pollen varies by month

    A 15-year study conducted in the New York City area charts how air concentrations of different types of allergy-causing pollen vary throughout an average year.

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  7. Earth

    Mineral Deposit: Asbestos linked to lupus, arthritis

    Already known to cause lung cancer, asbestos has now been associated with three autoimmune diseases.

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  8. Earth

    Cleaning up pollution, whey down deep

    Lab and field tests hint that dairy whey, a lactose-rich by-product of the dairy industry, could be used to clean up underground water supplies tainted by the solvent trichloroethylene.

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  9. Earth

    Subglacial lakes may not be isolated ecosystems

    Large volumes of water may occasionally flow between the lakes that lie deep beneath Antarctica's kilometers-thick ice sheet.

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  10. Earth

    Gasp! Ozone limits don’t protect babies

    In healthy infants, even ozone concentrations well below those allowed by federal law trigger asthmalike symptoms.

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  11. Earth

    Toxic Tides: Another reason to worry about hurricanes

    The hurricanes that struck Florida in the summer of 2004 also may have triggered an intense, widespread, and long-lasting red tide that afflicted the state's west-central coast throughout 2005.

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  12. Earth

    Deep-sea action

    Scientists using remotely operated vehicles have reported the first close-up observations of a deep undersea volcano during its eruption.

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