Earth

  1. Agriculture

    Soy-protein quality versus quantity

    New tests show that as the protein yields of soybeans rise, the growth-enhancing quality of that protein as a food or feed decreases.

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  2. Earth

    Toxic Surfs

    Scientists have discovered not only three new mechanisms by which an alga species in Florida water can poison but also a trio of natural antidotes produced within that same species.

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  3. Earth

    Letters from the July 16, 2005, issue of Science News

    Muddy, clarified “Muddy Waters” (SN: 5/21/05, p. 328), on the deleterious effect of dams on coastal systems, contains a major conceptual error. It states that “another important cause of the ground sinking is the waning of sediment deposition by the Mississippi River.” But over the past 100 million years, the northern Gulf Coast region has […]

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  4. Earth

    Pollution Ups Blood Pressure: Inhaled particles linked to transient effect

    In a laboratory setting, volunteers breathing pollutants generated by sources such as vehicle engines experience slight but steady increases in blood pressure.

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  5. Earth

    Arctic Foulers: Foraging seabirds carry contaminants home

    When seabirds go out looking for food, they can bring home traces of pollutants that build up around their nesting colonies.

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  6. Earth

    Power-laden winds sweep North America

    There's more than enough wind power to satisfy the United States' energy requirements, a new analysis of weather data suggests.

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  7. Earth

    Growth Slumps: Melting permafrost shapes Alaskan lakes

    A new model suggests that some fast-growing, egg-shaped lakes in Alaska expand when their permafrost banks melt and slump in tiny landslides.

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  8. Earth

    Volcanic Hot Spots

    Many geophysical studies, including analyses of deep-traveling seismic waves and computer simulations of flowing molten rock deep beneath Earth's crust, are providing evidence that mantle plumes actually exist.

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  9. Earth

    Bacteria Ride the Tide: Moon’s phases predict water quality at beaches

    At many ocean beaches, full and new moons coincide with the greatest concentrations of bacteria in the water.

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  10. Earth

    Antarctica’s gaining ice in some spots

    Large portions of Antarctica are storing more snowfall than they once did.

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  11. Earth

    Wetland Blanket: Volcanic sulfates may curb methane emission

    Field studies hint that the deposition on wetlands of sulfate compounds from the atmosphere could temporarily stifle those regions' natural emissions of methane.

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  12. Earth

    Farmers without Fungus: How to store peanuts to reduce toxins

    African peanut farmers can more than halve their exposure to a class of harmful fungal toxins called aflatoxins by adopting several simple measures after harvest.

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