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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
  • The Space Rock That Hit the Moon at 61,000 Kilometres an Hour

    Observers watching January’s total eclipse of the Moon saw a rare event, a short-lived flash as a meteorite hit the lunar surface. 

  • U.S. Cities Host More Regionally Unique Species Than Previously Thought

    Scientists are analyzing a rare snapshot in time of urban plants and animals. 

  • Summer Extremes of 2018 Linked to Stalled Giant Waves in Jet Stream

    Record breaking heatwaves and droughts in North America and Western Europe, torrential rainfalls and floods in South-East Europe and Japan - the summer of 2018 brought a series of extreme weather events that occurred almost simultaneously around the Northern Hemisphere in June and July. 

  • A Novel Method for Assessing Combined Risk of Multiple Tap Water Pollutants

    The array of toxic pollutants in California drinking water could cause more than 15,000 cases of cancer, according to a peer-reviewed EWG study that is the first ever to assess the cumulative risk from all contaminants in the state’s public water systems.

  • New Polymer Films Conduct Heat Instead of Trapping It

    Polymers are usually the go-to material for thermal insulation.

  • Big Problems, Tiny Solutions

    Vikram Yadav, a chemical engineering assistant professor who joined UBC’s faculty of applied science four years ago, is using some of the world’s tiniest creatures—yeasts and bacteria—to find solutions for some weighty problems.

  • GRACE Mission Data Contributes to Our Understanding of Climate Change

    The University of Texas at Austin team that led a twin satellite system launched in 2002 to take detailed measurements of the Earth, called the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE), reports in the most recent issue of the journal Nature Climate Change on the contributions that their nearly two decades of data have made to our understanding of global climate patterns.

  • The Last Chance for Madagascar’s Biodiversity

    Scientists from around the world have joined together to identify the most important actions needed by Madagascar’s new government to prevent species and habitats being lost for ever.

  • Wax Helps Plants to Survive in the Desert

    In 1956, the Würzburg botanist Otto Ludwig Lange  observed an unusual phenomenon in the Mauritanian desert in West Africa: he found plants whose leaves could heat up to 56 degrees Celsius. 

  • WSU Study Links Gene to Sleep Problems in Autism

    Up to 80 percent of children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) experience sleep problems. 

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