Earth

  1. Earth

    Climate’s Long-Lost Twin

    New geological evidence suggests that humans have started exploiting fossil fuels and altering Earth's atmosphere at precisely the moment when greenhouse gases could do the most damage to climate.

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  2. Earth

    Global Impact: Space object may have spread debris worldwide

    Sediments laid down about 3.47 billion years ago in what are now western Australia and eastern South Africa contain remnants of what may have been an extraterrestrial-object impact large enough to disperse debris over the entire planet.

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  3. Earth

    2002’s tornado tally well below average

    As of August 1, barely half the usual number of tornadoes had struck the lower 48 states of the United States.

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  4. Earth

    Cigarette smoke can harm kitty, too

    Compared with animals living in smokefree homes, cats who lived for some time with a smoker at least doubled their risk of developing the feline analog of the cancer non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.

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  5. Earth

    Nature’s Own: Ocean yields gases that had seemed humanmade

    Chemical analyses of seawater provide the first direct evidence that the ocean may be a significant source of certain atmospheric gases that scientists had previously assumed to be produced primarily by industrial activity.

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  6. Earth

    Killer Cocktails: Drug mixes threaten aquatic ecosystems

    Trace amounts of pharmaceutical drugs in waterways may work together to deform and kill native microscopic organisms.

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  7. Earth

    El Niño: It’s back!

    An increase in ocean temperatures in the central Pacific heralds the onset of El Niño, whose effects should show up in the United States this fall.

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  8. Earth

    Just how much do U.S. roads matter?

    A Harvard researcher calculates that roads directly influence the ecology of a fifth of U.S. land area.

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  9. Earth

    DDT treatment turns male fish into mothers

    Injecting into fish eggs an estrogen-mimicking form of the pesticide DDT transforms genetically male medaka fish into apparent females able to lay eggs that produce young.

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  10. Earth

    Long, Dry Spells: Lengthy droughts tied to long-lived La Niñas

    A new study of persistent droughts that occurred in the United States during the past 3 centuries suggests that those dry spells may be associated with prolonged periods when sea-surface temperatures in the central Pacific were cooler than average.

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  11. Earth

    West Coast Shimmy: Smack from space triggered landslides along Pacific Coast

    Scientists say they've found the first evidence along the Pacific Coast of massive landslides triggered by the impact from space 65 million years ago that's suspected to have wiped out the dinosaurs.

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  12. Earth

    Study links dioxin to breast cancer

    A new study finds support for the long-proposed hypothesis that dioxin, a hormonelike pollutant, can trigger breast cancer in heavily exposed women.

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