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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
  • NCCOS Scientists Publish Flow Rates for 14-year-long Oil Spill in Gulf of Mexico

    Scientists from NOAA’s National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science (NCCOS) have calculated a new estimate of flow rates of oil leaking at the site of the former Taylor Energy Mississippi Canyon 20 (MC20) drilling platform at between nine and 108 barrels (378 to 4,536 gallons) a day.

  • National Trash: Reducing Waste Produced in U.S. National Parks

    When you think of national parks, you might picture the vast plateaus of the Grand Canyon, the intricate wetlands of the Everglades or the inspiring viewscapes of the Grand Tetons. 

  • Thunderbolt of Lightning, Gamma Rays Exciting

    University of Tokyo graduate student Yuuki Wada with colleagues from Japan discover a connection between lightning strikes and two kinds of gamma-ray phenomena in thunderclouds.

  • Researchers Create First Portable Tech for Detecting Cyanotoxins in Water

    North Carolina State University researchers have developed the first portable technology that can test for cyanotoxins in water. 

  • Engineers Automate Science from Remote Antarctic Station

    A remote and unoccupied research station in Antarctica has, for the first time, collected important scientific measurements of climate, ozone and space weather thanks to ground-breaking technology developed by British Antarctic Survey’s (BAS) engineers.

  • Ant Farmers Boost Plant Nutrition with Their Faeces, Offering Clues for Future Food Security

    Humans began cultivating crops about 12,000 years ago. Ants have been at it rather longer. 

  • Big Data Says Food Is Too Sweet

    New research from the Monell Center analyzed nearly 400,000 food reviews posted by Amazon customers to gain real-world insight into the food choices that people make. 

  • Ancient Intervention Could Boost Dwindling Water Reserves in Coastal Peru

    Nestled between the Pacific Ocean and the Andes mountains, the people of Peru’s coastal region rely on surface water from the Andes for drinking water, industry, and animal and crop farming.

  • Columbia Researchers Provide New Evidence on the Reliability of Climate Modeling

    For decades, scientists studying a key climate phenomenon have been grappling with contradictory data that have threated to undermine confidence in the reliability of climate models overall.

  • Clouds Dominate Uncertainties in Predicting Future Greenland Melt

    New research led by climate scientists from the University of Bristol suggests that the representation of clouds in climate models is as, or more, important than the amount of greenhouse gas emissions when it comes to projecting future Greenland ice sheet melt.

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