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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
  • PCB Contamination in Icelandic Orcas: A Matter of Diet

    A new study from McGill University suggests that some Icelandic killer whales have very high concentrations of PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls) in their blubber.

  • Transforming Atmospheric Carbon Into Industrially Useful Materials

    Plants are unparalleled in their ability to capture CO2 from the air, but this benefit is temporary, as leftover crops release carbon back into the atmosphere, mostly through decomposition. 

  • Legendary Sargasso Sea May be Sea Turtles’ Destination during Mysterious ‘Lost Years’

    New research indicates that the legendary Sargasso Sea, which includes part of the Bermuda Triangle and has long featured in fiction as a place where ships go derelict, may actually be an important nursery habitat for young sea turtles.

  • Ice Core Chemistry Research Expands Insight into Sea Ice Variability in Southern Hemisphere

    Sea ice cover in the Southern Hemisphere is extremely variable, from summer to winter and from millennium to millennium, according to a University of Maine-led study. Overall, sea ice has been on the rise for about 10,000 years, but with some exceptions to this trend.

  • New Study Tracked Large Sharks During Hurricanes

    A new study led by scientists at the University of Miami (UM) Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science tracked large sharks in Miami and The Bahamas to understand how these migratory animals respond to major storms, like hurricanes.

  • Lightning and Subvisible Discharges Produce Molecules that Clean the Atmosphere

    Lightning bolts break apart nitrogen and oxygen molecules in the atmosphere and create reactive chemicals that affect greenhouse gases.

  • In Colombia, Indigenous Lands Are Ground Zero for a Wind Energy Boom

    It all started about four years ago, when SUVs and pickup trucks drove uninvited onto their lands, remembers Olimpia Palmar, a member of the Indigenous Wayúu peoples, who have historically occupied the La Guajira desert in northern Colombia and Venezuela.

  • Antarctica Remains the Wild Card for Sea-Level Rise Estimates Through 2100

    A massive collaborative research project covered in the journal Nature this week offers projections to the year 2100 of future sea-level rise from all sources of land ice, offering the most complete projections created to date.

  • Flooding Might Triple in the Mountains of Asia

    A team of Swiss and international climate scientists has shown that the risk of glacial lake outburst floods in the Himalayan region and the Tibetan plateau could triple in the coming decades.

  • Temperature Explains Why Aquatic Life More Diverse Near Equator

    The bulging, equator-belted midsection of Earth currently teems with a greater diversity of life than anywhere else — a biodiversity that generally wanes when moving from the tropics to the mid-latitudes and the mid-latitudes to the poles.

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