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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
  • Building Bridges: USU Natural Resources Researchers Monitor Wildlife Overpass Usage

    In May 2020 Nicki Frey, an Extension assistant professor in the S.J & Jessie E. Quinney College of Natural Resources, and her undergraduate researcher, Natalie D’Souza, began monitoring wildlife use of a new overpass crossing I-80 in Parley’s Canyon in Summit County, Utah.

  • Climate Change and Public Lands: Can Scientists, Land Managers and Policy Makers Join Forces?

    How is climate change affecting public lands and what are land management agencies doing about it? A team of scientists from the fields of sociology, watershed sciences, wildland resources, ecology, environment and society, mathematic, and outdoor recreation and tourism asked these questions in a recent Ecosphere study.

  • Marine Mammals’ Adaptations to Low Oxygen Offer New Perspective on COVID-19

    When Terrie Williams began hearing about the wide range of symptoms experienced by patients with COVID-19, she saw a connection between the various ways the disease is affecting people and the many physiological adaptations that have enabled marine mammals to tolerate low oxygen levels during dives.

  • What Makes Certain Groups More Vulnerable to COVID-19?

    What makes the elderly and people with underlying conditions more vulnerable to COVID-19? 

  • Proverbial Wolf Can’t Blow Down Modern Timber High-Rises, Says UBCO Researchers

    With an increasing demand for a more sustainable alternative for high-rise construction, new research from UBC Okanagan, in collaboration with Western University and FPInnovations, points to timber as a sustainable and effective way to make tall, high-density, and renewable buildings.

  • Red Sea Turtle Hatchlings Are Feeling the Heat

    Analyses by KAUST researchers of sand temperatures at marine turtle nesting sites around the Red Sea indicate that turtle hatchlings born in the region could now be predominantly female.

  • Best Region for Life on Mars Was Far Below Surface

    The most habitable region for life on Mars would have been up to several miles below its surface, likely due to subsurface melting of thick ice sheets fueled by geothermal heat, a Rutgers-led study concludes.

  • Study Finds 10 Metabolites Associated with Risk of Stroke

    Metabolites are small molecules found in our body’s cells. They come from the food we eat, chemical processes happening within our bodies and microbes.

  • Once in a Lifetime Floods to Become Regular Occurrences by End of Century

    Superstorm Sandy brought flood-levels to the New York region that had not been seen in generations.

  • 'Message in a Bottle' Tracks Plastic Pollution

    Researchers put GPS and satellite tags in plastic bottles in the Ganges and the Bay of Bengal.

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