NASA-NOAA’s Suomi NPP satellite provided forecasters with visible image of the Eastern Pacific Ocean’s second tropical storm of the season, Boris.
New Cornell-led research shows that inadequate funding is the main barrier to better surveillance and control of ticks, including the blacklegged tick, which spreads Lyme disease, the No. 1 vector-borne illness in the country.
Reservoirs in the heart of an ancient Maya city were so polluted with mercury and blue-green algae that the water likely was undrinkable.
A new study illustrates the potential impact of recurrent heatwaves on coral species collected by the Australian aquarium coral industry.
With every droplet that we can’t see, touch, or feel dispersed into the air, the threat of spreading Covid-19 persists.
The study, by the University of the West of England and the Greenpeace Research Laboratories at the University of Exeter, presents the hypothesis that disease risks are “ultimately interlinked” with biodiversity and natural processes such as the water cycle.
Long-term rainfall deficits, heat waves, and increased evaporation have depleted some of the groundwater supply beneath central and eastern Europe.
Aerosol particles absorb and scatter incoming sunlight, which reduces visibility and increases the optical depth.
New model estimates COVID-19 transmission in classrooms, buses, protests, more.
Fires have spread across the majority of the landscape in Angola and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Page 824 of 1692