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Scooped by
Diana Rodriguez
February 16, 2:28 PM
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Scooped by
marisa denninger
March 10, 3:17 PM
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Northern wildfires may be more dangerous for the climate than they appear. Researchers found that fires in boreal forests can burn deep into peat soils, releasing ancient carbon stored for hundreds or thousands of years. These slow, smoldering fires often look small from space, causing climate models to underestimate their emissions.
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Scooped by
Heather Farlow
March 10, 12:06 PM
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We'd like this to be a model moving forward for how community concerns can be integrated into research priorities," said Dr. Ashlinn K. Quinn.
News and Press Release in English on Japan about Disaster Management, Earthquake, Technological Disaster and more; published on 9 Mar 2026 by ESCAP
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Scooped by
Christopher Blackwell
March 9, 8:11 PM
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Scooped by
Kalani Wagoner
March 4, 8:37 PM
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February, which saw "unseasonably warm" weather and mean temperatures 3C above the normal, marked the end of the city's warmest winter.
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Scooped by
Ryan Murgatroyd
March 4, 6:01 PM
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Analysis shows average levels are 30cm higher than thought, and up to 150cm in south-east Asia and Indo-Pacific
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Scooped by
Cael Thor Hill
March 4, 3:25 PM
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A massive sewage spill in the Potomac points to the need for improved infrastructure
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Scooped by
marisa denninger
March 3, 5:41 PM
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Scientists have proposed a surprising connection between solar flares and earthquakes. When solar activity disturbs the ionosphere, it may generate electric fields that penetrate fragile fracture zones in Earth’s crust. If a fault is already critically stressed, this extra electrostatic pressure could help trigger a quake. The idea doesn’t claim direct causation, but it offers a fresh way to think about how space weather and seismic events might interact.
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Scooped by
Rogelio Navarro
March 3, 4:25 PM
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Scooped by
Heather Farlow
March 3, 12:25 PM
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EPA rolls back rules as chemical firms claim provisions in RMP protection system too expensive to implement
Military installations were expected to complete a spreadsheet in 2025 detailing a range of extreme weather impacts.
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Scooped by
Irma Hinojos
March 10, 9:47 PM
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We'd like this to be a model moving forward for how community concerns can be integrated into research priorities," said Dr. Ashlinn K. Quinn.
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Scooped by
Sierra Williams
March 10, 12:41 PM
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The National Marine Fisheries Service is planning to loosen speed-limit rules protecting the critically endangered North Atlantic right whale.
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Scooped by
Rogelio Navarro
March 10, 10:37 AM
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USDA declares 26 counties in Florida natural disaster areas following record-breaking freeze events. The designation means aid is on the way.
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Scooped by
Catalina Monroe
March 10, 12:44 AM
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The wildflowers have painted the usually barren landscape of Death Valley National Park — one of the hottest and driest places in the country — in pretty pink, purple and yellow.
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Scooped by
Mia Willis
March 6, 8:51 PM
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Scientist Duan Baoyan says the Zhuri project could also act as a ‘space-based power bank’ to charge satellites and other facilities.
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Scooped by
Devan Page
March 4, 8:16 PM
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Even in the ultra-dry Atacama Desert, tiny soil-dwelling nematodes are thriving in surprising diversity. Scientists found that biodiversity increases with moisture and altitude shapes which species survive. In the most extreme zones, many nematodes reproduce asexually — a possible survival advantage. The discovery suggests that life in arid regions may be far richer, and more fragile, than once believed.
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Scooped by
Ryan Prem
March 4, 3:53 PM
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Montana is seeing record-breaking warmth this winter, with temperatures soaring into the 50s, leaving residents wondering if a traditional winter is still on the way.
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Scooped by
Ashlyn Olson
March 4, 1:24 PM
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Pure Earth announced today that it has been named an Audacious Project grantee, receiving a major multi-year investment to help governments in more than 20 countries reduce childhood lead poisoning at scale and protect over 500 million children by 2033.
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Scooped by
Irma Hinojos
March 3, 10:07 PM
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Rural Coloradans working to recover from 2025 fires and floods, without FEMA assistance, are left wondering how to pay the bill.
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Scooped by
Catalina Monroe
March 3, 4:57 PM
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D.C Water is beginning to restore the land damaged by the partial collapse of the Potomac Interceptor sewer line.
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Scooped by
Christopher Blackwell
March 3, 3:01 PM
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On February 6, Judge Robin Rosenberg, the Director of the Federal Judicial Center, removed a climate chapter from the US Reference Manual.
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Scooped by
Sierra Williams
March 2, 9:37 PM
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A new study finds North American bird populations keep dropping, and that decline is speeding up for many species.
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Scooped by
Irma Hinojos
February 26, 1:44 AM
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