Latest science news in Earth & Climate

Cyclone Mocha makes landfall in Myanmar with wind speeds over 200 km/h

Thousands of people hunkered down Sunday in monasteries, pagodas and schools, seeking shelter from a powerful storm that slammed into the coast of Myanmar, tearing the roofs off buildings and...

Cyclone Mocha makes landfall in Myanmar with wind speeds over 200 km/h

Thousands of people hunkered down Sunday in monasteries, pagodas and schools, seeking shelter from a powerful storm that slammed into the coast of Myanmar, tearing the roofs off buildings and...

As Canada considers ban on plastic produce labels, this company makes paper and compostable ones

A manufacturer near Windsor, Ont., has been making paper produce labels for over 20 years and recently started developing fully compostable ones, at a time when Canada is weighing banning...

As Canada considers ban on plastic produce labels, this company makes paper and compostable ones

A manufacturer near Windsor, Ont., has been making paper produce labels for over 20 years and recently started developing fully compostable ones, at a time when Canada is weighing banning...

Flirting with climate danger: UN forecasts 2 in 3 chance of briefly hitting key heat limit soon

There's a two-out-of-three chance within the next five years that the world will temporarily reach the internationally accepted global temperature threshold for limiting the worst effects of climate change, a...

What does a 1.5 C increase in global temperatures mean for Canada?

A report from the World Meteorological Organization forecasts that global temperatures are likely to soon pass the 1.5 C limit set by the 2015 Paris climate agreement. But Canada has...

Canadian forest fires are the latest costly climate disaster that public accounts fail to capture

Even as Canadians choke on orange smoke, the parliamentary budget officer says there is no way to add the benefits of fighting climate change to the national books. The World...

Meet Matilda, Hay River's huffing, grunting, four-legged wildfire evacuee

A wildfire forced Scott and Leanne Clouthier to evacuate from Hay River. There was no way they were leaving their pet pig behind.

Cleaning up ocean ‘garbage patches’ could destroy delicate ecosystems

1 year ago from Science NOW

Removing trash from the ocean may not be as harmless as it seems. That’s the conclusion of new research, which finds that marine dumps known as “garbage patches” are home to countless...

How greatest biological discovery of 20th century got passed over

1 year ago from Harvard Science

Harvard microbiologist Richard Losick is still teaching at age 80 and did so Saturday, telling an audience of well over 100 at Harvard’s Northwest Building the story of DNA’s discovery — the real...

How greatest biological discovery of 20th century got passed over

1 year ago from Harvard Science

Harvard microbiologist Richard Losick is still teaching at age 80 and did so Saturday, telling an audience of well over 100 at Harvard’s Northwest Building the story of DNA’s discovery — the real...

Peabody Museum exhibit reflects changing face of Shehuo festival

1 year ago from Harvard Science

When Zhang Xiao began his exploration of the Shehuo festival in rural China in 2007, he created ethereal photographs of performers wearing elaborate makeup and costumes. Performers told him some of the meticulously...

Think incubator for fresh ideas, innovation, new leaders to fight warming

1 year ago from Harvard Science

Dhananjay Goel remembers how water had to be rationed in his grandmother’s city in north India after extreme weather events, which became more intense and regular amid worsening climate change. He decided that...

The struggle to design green buildings amid shifting legal, tech landscape

1 year ago from Harvard Science

The push to prepare American cities and towns for greater climate resilience has become more urgent in recent years as scientific evidence of warming mounts and extreme weather events grow more common. Officials...

The struggle to design green buildings amid shifting legal, tech landscape

1 year ago from Harvard Science

The push to prepare American cities and towns for greater climate resilience has become more urgent in recent years as scientific evidence of warming mounts and extreme weather events grow more common. Officials...

World ‘way off track’ on climate goal, says John Kerry

1 year ago from Harvard Science

The push to keep the rise in global temperatures to 1.5 degrees Celsius is doomed unless world leaders take significant near-term action to cut greenhouse gas emissions, U.S. Special Envoy for Climate John...

World ‘way off track’ on climate goal, says John Kerry

1 year ago from Harvard Science

The push to keep the rise in global temperatures to 1.5 degrees Celsius is doomed unless world leaders take significant near-term action to cut greenhouse gas emissions, U.S. Special Envoy for Climate John...

How climate change may threaten soil’s ability to capture carbon

1 year ago from Harvard Science

The leaves of trees and plants have been called the Earth’s lungs because they take in carbon dioxide and give out oxygen. But beneath the soil’s surface, the roots of those plants...

Two NASA Studies Find Lower Methane Emissions in Los Angeles Region

1 year ago from Science @ NASA

Portal origin URL: Two NASA Studies Find Lower Methane Emissions in Los Angeles RegionPortal origin nid: 487194Published: Monday, May 15, 2023 - 11:20Featured (stick to top of list): noPortal text teaser: Researchers found that emissions...

In one lake deep under Antarctica’s ice, microbes feast on ancient carbon

1 year ago from Sciencenews.org

How microbes survive in lakes far beneath Antarctica’s ice sheet has been a mystery. Now scientists have figured out what’s on the menu for microbes in one buried lake in West Antarctica....

Deliberate ignorance is useful in certain circumstances, researchers say

1 year ago from Sciencenews.org

In 1961, renowned German novelist Günter Grass openly criticized communist East Germany for building the Berlin Wall ostensibly to prevent West Germans from infiltrating the country. In reality, the wall was more effective...

More than half of the world’s largest lakes are drying up

1 year ago from Sciencenews.org

More than half of the world’s largest lakes shrank over the last three decades, researchers report in the May 19 Science. That’s a big problem for the people who depend on those...

Juice’s RIME antenna breaks free

1 year ago from European Space Agency

More than three weeks after efforts began to deploy Juice’s ice-penetrating Radar for Icy Moon Exploration (RIME) antenna, the 16-metre-long boom has finally escaped its mounting bracket.

Our oceans are in hot water

1 year ago from European Space Agency

Adding to the grim list of record ice losses, record air temperatures and record droughts, which have all hit the headlines recently, the temperature of the surface waters of our...

Italy's deadly floods just latest example of climate change's all-or-nothing weather extremes

1 year ago from Physorg

The floods that sent rivers of mud tearing through towns in Italy's northeast are another drenching dose of climate change's all-or-nothing weather extremes, something that has been happening around the...

Smoke from Canada wildfires prompts air quality alerts in Colorado, Montana

1 year ago from Physorg

Smoke from dozens of raging wildfires in western Canada has drifted south into the United States and prompted the states of Colorado and Montana to issue air quality alerts.

Spain says containing wildfire as conditions improve

1 year ago from Physorg

Spanish authorities said Saturday that firefighters and soldiers were managing to contain a blaze in the country's west that has forced hundreds of people to evacuate from nearby villages.

Fine-tuning air pollution models

1 year ago from Physorg

Air pollution doesn't affect everybody the same way. And in a new study, researchers developed a method to improve estimates of how, within cities, different communities are exposed to fine...