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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
  • FSU Researchers Discover How ‘Cryptic Species’ Respond Differently to Coral Bleaching

    Certain brightly colored coral species dotting the seafloor may appear indistinguishable to many divers and snorkelers, but Florida State University researchers have found that these genetically diverse marine invertebrates vary in their response to ocean warming, a finding that has implications for the long-term health of coral reefs.

  • Meandering Rivers Create “Counter-Point Bars” No Matter Underlying Geology

    It’s not uncommon for crescent-shaped swaths of sand to dot the shorelines of meandering rivers. 

  • New Imaging Technology Could Help Predict Heart Attacks

    Researchers have developed a new intravascular imaging technique that could one day be used to detect coronary plaques that are likely to lead to a heart attack.

  • Study: One Enzyme Dictates Cells’ Response to a Probable Carcinogen

    In the past few years, several medications have been found to be contaminated with NDMA, a probable carcinogen.

  • Study Shows How Varying Climate Conditions Impact Vulnerable Species

    New findings on the diet of Arctic foxes, determined by the condition of their teeth, show how varying climate conditions in the Arctic affect the animals that live there.

  • EV Turning Point: Momentum Builds for U.S. Electric Vehicle Transition

    Last month’s failure of the Texas electric grid, coming just weeks after General Motors’ pledge to make only electric vehicles by 2035, highlights the daunting task the United States faces as it takes the first steps toward weaning its economy off fossil fuels.

  • Researchers Discover Intact Plant Fossils Beneath Greenland’s Ice Sheet for the First Time

    Following a relocation of ice cores to the Copenhagen suburb of Rødovre in 2017, University of Copenhagen researchers found unopened boxes of ice cores dating back to 1966—the first ice cores drilled on Earth.

  • Not Just CO2: Rising Temperatures Also Alter Photosynthesis in a Changing Climate

    Agricultural scientists who study climate change often focus on how increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide levels will affect crop yields. 

  • COVID Waste: Archaeologists Have a Role to Play in Informing Environmental Policy

    Archaeologists have a vital role to play in documenting COVID-19 waste but also in informing the policies that may mitigate its longer-term impact, a new study suggests.

  • University of Utah Scientists Plumb the Depths of the World's Tallest Geyser

    When Steamboat Geyser, the world’s tallest, started erupting again in 2018 in Yellowstone National Park after decades of relative silence, it raised a few tantalizing scientific questions. 

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