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  • Top Stories
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  • Climate
  • Energy
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    • Agriculture
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  • NASA’s GPM Satellite Examines Weakening Tropical Cyclone Kenanga

    Tropical Cyclone Kenanga is now on a weakening trend and NASA’s GPM core satellite provided a look at the rainfall and cloud heights within the storm.

  • Two Type 2 Diabetes Drugs Linked to Higher Risk of Heart Disease

    Two drugs commonly prescribed to treat Type 2 diabetes carry a high risk of cardiovascular events such as heart attack, stroke, heart failure or amputation, according to a new Northwestern Medicine study. 

  • Forecasters May Be Looking in Wrong Place When Predicting Tornadoes, Ohio Research Shows

    Weather forecasters may be looking in the wrong place when working to issue tornado warnings, new research led by Ohio University has demonstrated.

  • Wildlife Struggle to Cope with Extreme Weather

    The mass death of flying foxes in extreme heat in North Queensland last month underscores the importance of University of Queensland wildlife research released today.

  • Pollutants from Wild Fires Affect Crop and Vegetation Growth Hundreds of Kilometres from Impact Zone, Research Shows

    The startling extent to which violent wild fires, similar to those that ravaged large swathes of California recently, affect forests and crops way beyond the boundaries of the blaze has been revealed.

  • Dust Threatens Utah's 'Greatest Snow on Earth'

    Utah’s Wasatch Mountains are famous for having “The Greatest Snow on Earth.” 

  • Droughts Boost Emissions as Hydropower Dries Up

    When hydropower runs low in a drought, western states tend to ramp up power generation – and emissions – from fossil fuels. 

  • 'A fresh strategy': Researchers discover low-cost way to produce hydrogen from water

    A new catalyst developed by University of Toronto researchers could make it cheaper and easier to produce hydrogen from water – a process some say is key to storing energy from renewable, but intermittent, sources like solar and wind.

  • Tethered antibodies present a potential new approach to prevent influenza virus

    As co-leaders of an international collaboration, scientists at Scripps Research have discovered that tethering four antibodies together may be an effective strategy for neutralizing all types of influenza virus known to infect humans.

  • New Threat to Ozone Recovery

    Earlier this year, the United Nations announced some much-needed, positive news about the environment: The ozone layer, which shields the Earth from the sun’s harmful ultraviolet radiation, and which was severely depleted by decades of human-derived, ozone-destroying chemicals, is on the road to recovery.

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