Latest science news in Earth & Climate

Phoenix Scrapes Up Water Ice Samples

16 years ago from Space.com

Phoenix uses rasp to scrape ice samples, will deliver to onboard instruments.

China aftershocks set for weeks, months even years

16 years ago from Reuters:Science

SYDNEY (Reuters) - China's devastated Sichuan region can expect to be rocked by aftershocks for weeks and months, possibly years, but the power of the aftershocks, one destroyed some 420,000...

U.S. climate change detailed

16 years ago from UPI

WASHINGTON, May 29 (UPI) -- A federal report maintains climate change is already affecting U.S. water resources, agriculture, land resources and biodiversity.

Cellphone spectrum auction tops $700 million on day two

16 years ago from CBC: Technology & Science

The government's auction of cellphone airwaves edged closer to raking in a billion dollars Wednesday on only its second day, with potential newcomer Quebecor so far the biggest spender.

China Launches Second Olympic Satellite

16 years ago from Space.com

China launched a weather satellite to help the Olympics and earthquake recovery efforts.

Scientists warn of rising Pacific Coast acidity

16 years ago from Physorg

(AP) -- A panel of marine scientists are warning that the Pacific Coast's increasing acidity could disrupt food chains and threaten the Pacific Northwest's shellfish industry.

Great Lake's future forests are assessed

16 years ago from UPI

PELLSTON, Mich., May 27 (UPI) -- U.S. scientists are killing about 7,000 aspen and birch trees in a large-scale, long-term experiment to glimpse the Great Lakes region's future...

Observatory: Glaciers in Antarctica May Be Releasing DDT Through Meltwater

16 years ago from NY Times Science

New research indicates it’s likely that Antarctic glaciers are delivering the pesticide into the food chain through meltwater.

Ord River's ecology explained

16 years ago from Science Alert

Research on the Ord River, an important source of water for Western Australian agriculture, has modelled how different water uses would affect the river.

NZ's climate to heat up

16 years ago from Science Alert

Updated climate change projections have been released for New Zealand, which warn of a 2ºC temperature increase by 2090 and the continued shrinking of glaciers.

Conservative group hits senators on climate bill

16 years ago from AP Science

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A conservative, free-market advocacy group will begin airing ads this week pressing Senate Republicans and Democrats to vote against a bill that aims to reduce greenhouse gas...

Scorched Earth Millenium Map Shows 'Fire Scars'

16 years ago from Science Daily

A geographer has produced for the first time a map of the scorched Earth for every year since the turn of the millennium. The map reveals that between 3.5 and...

Remote controlled planes to explore hurricanes

16 years ago from Reuters:Science

MIAMI (Reuters) - U.S. researchers are ramping up their use of unmanned, remote-controlled airplanes this year to penetrate the heart of Atlantic hurricanes in the hope of learning more about...

Conditions ripe for disease in Myanmar

16 years ago from AP Health

DEDAYE, Myanmar (AP) -- Myint Hlaing's family bathes and cooks with water from an irrigation ditch fouled by human waste and a rotting cow carcass....

WWF urges Brazil biofuel projects

16 years ago from BBC News: Science & Nature

Protected areas are needed to prevent damage from the expansion of Brazilian sugar cane, the WWF says.

Ocean Acidification And Its Impact On Ecosystems

16 years ago from Science Daily

Emissions of carbon dioxide through human activities have a well known impact on the Earth's climate. What is not so well known is that the absorption of this carbon dioxide...

New algorithm increases accuracy of air-pollution predictions

16 years ago from Physorg

When air-quality monitors and environmental regulators inspect the pollution levels of certain cities, the difference of one or two parts per million in the concentration of pollutants like ozone and...

Monster Quakes Set Off Global Tremors

16 years ago from National Geographic

Swarms of distant tremors occur when vibrations from a big quake pass over faults—a common phenomenon that may have occurred during the recent China quake, experts say.

Parts of UK could be too hot for wine-making by 2080

16 years ago from Science Blog

Increasing summer temperatures could mean some parts of southern England are too hot to grow vines for making wine by 2080. read more

Opinion: A mind is a terrible thing to waste

16 years ago from Science Alert

With a population of only 21 million, can we afford to waste a single, talented person, questions Peter Doherty?

How Green Is the College? Time the Showers

16 years ago from NY Times Science

As part of a growing campus sustainability movement, students are reducing carbon emissions in their own lives.

Merlot from Yorkshire, Hampshire too hot to make wine: expert's prediction for 2080

16 years ago from The Guardian - Science

Viticulture may shift up north, with southern UK better suited to raisins, if temperature continues to rise

Can big earthquakes trigger a domino effect?

16 years ago from MSNBC: Science

The giant earthquake that unleashed the Indian Ocean tsunamis in 2004 — killing more than 225,000 people in one of the deadliest natural disasters in history — might also have...

Warm winds comfort climate change models: study

16 years ago from Physorg

Climate change models predicting a dangerous warming of the world's atmosphere got a confirming boost Sunday from a study showing parallel trends at altitudes nearly twice as high as Mount...

To predict quakes, listen to the animals, China survivors say

16 years ago from Physorg

Well before this city was destroyed by an earthquake 32 years ago, the coming disaster was loudly preceded by strange animal behaviour and other bizarre signals that survivors wish they...

Big Earthquakes Spark Jolts Worldwide

16 years ago from Science Daily

Until 1992, when California's magnitude-7.3 Landers earthquake set off small jolts as far away as Yellowstone National Park, scientists did not believe large earthquakes sparked smaller tremors at distant locations....

Pollution eyed in dip in U.S. male births

16 years ago from UPI

CHICAGO, May 25 (UPI) -- Experts say they suspect industrial pollutants are one possible cause of a statistical downturn in the number of boys being born in the...

Scientists See Supernova in Action

16 years ago from NY Times Science

A paper being published in Nature recounts the rare observation of a star’s eruption into cataclysmic explosion known as a supernova.