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JA Purity IV JA Purity IV
  • Top Stories
  • ENN Original
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Ecosystems
  • Pollution
  • Wildlife
  • Policy
  • More
    • Agriculture
    • Green Building
    • Sustainability
    • Business
  • Sci/Tech
  • Health
  • Press Releases
  • In Hunted Rainforests, Termites Lose Their Dominance

    A tiny termite might see an elephant’s foot as its biggest threat. 

  • Soil Study Shows Australia at Its Most Stripped Back

    New research from The Australian National University (ANU) and Geoscience Australia could provide a much clearer picture of the Australian landscape, and how to better manage it under a changing climate.

  • Drone Images Show Greenland Ice Sheet Becoming More Unstable as It Fractures

    The world’s second-largest ice sheet, and the single largest contributor to global sea level rise, is potentially becoming unstable because of fractures developing in response to faster ice flow and more meltwater forming on its surface.

  • New Maps of Salinity Reveal the Impact of Climate Variability on Oceans

    Since the saltiness of ocean surface waters is a key variable in the climate system, understanding how this changes is important to understanding climate change. Thanks to ESA’s Climate Change Initiative, scientists now have better insight into sea-surface salinity with the most complete global dataset ever produced from space.

  • New Satellite System Can Map Tropical Forest Carbon Emissions

    For the first time, scientists have developed a method to monitor carbon emissions from tropical forests with an unprecedented level of detail. 

  • McGill-Led Research Unravels Mystery of How Early Animals Survived Ice Age

    How did life survive the most severe ice age? A McGill University-led research team has found the first direct evidence that glacial meltwater provided a crucial lifeline to eukaryotes during Snowball Earth, when the oceans were cut off from life-giving oxygen, answering a question puzzling scientists for years.

  • Earthquake Risk Perception: A Picture Is Worth a Thousand Stats

    Seismic engineers and psychologists from the University of British Columbia teamed up with a visual artist to create the image above, which shows what a Vancouver elementary school would look like after a major earthquake. 

  • Antarctic Ice Sheets Could Be at Greater Risk of Melting Than Previously Thought

    Antarctica is the largest reservoir of ice on Earth – but new research by the University of South Australia suggests it could be at greater risk of melting than previously thought.

  • Sustaining Roads with Grape and Agricultural Waste

    The U.S. spends $5 billion a year to repair damages to road infrastructure from winter snow and ice control operations and the use of traditional deicers. 

  • New Study Shows Link Between Precipitation, Climate Zone and Invasive Cancer Rates in the U.S.

    In a new study, researchers provide conclusive evidence of a statistical relationship between the incidence rates of invasive cancer in a given area in the U.S. and the amount of precipitation and climate type (which combines the temperature and moisture level in an area). 

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