Phys.org: Earth science

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The latest news on earth sciences and the environment
Updated: 17 hours 35 min ago

New model maps solar storms across 1 million miles around Earth

Fri, 07/10/2026 - 15:20
A team at the Applied Physics Lab is working to understand the complex science behind predicting invisible threats that can quickly cripple electric grid infrastructure on Earth.

What happened to Australia's snow season? A climate expert explains

Fri, 07/10/2026 - 14:40
There's nothing like gliding down a snow-covered slope. That is, if you ask the thousands of people who make an annual pilgrimage to our alpine resorts during the Australian winter. But this year, the start to the snow season has been far from spectacular.

Tiny mountain lakes pose big, overlooked flood risks, new study warns

Fri, 07/10/2026 - 13:40
A new international study involving scientists from the University of Aberdeen has revealed a critical blind spot in global climate risk assessments—the growing danger posed by small alpine lakes formed by glacier retreat and permafrost thaw. Published in Nature Sustainability, the research highlights how these lakes, which are often too small to appear in conventional hazard databases, can still unleash sudden and destructive floods with little warning.

Rising tides, rising tensions: New research calls for rethink of coastal law

Fri, 07/10/2026 - 13:20
As sea levels rise and coastlines erode, Australia's legal system is struggling to keep up. Longstanding assumptions about who owns the coast—and who should pay when it disappears—are now at the center of growing disputes.

AI reveals hidden San Andreas Fault movements

Thu, 07/09/2026 - 23:00
When people think about geological faults, they usually think about earthquakes. Yet faults do not move only during earthquakes. Sometimes they slip silently, without generating noticeable shaking, releasing stress over hours or days through slow fault movements that remain largely hidden from conventional monitoring systems.

From bursts to creep: Rewriting the story of mud volcano flows

Thu, 07/09/2026 - 21:20
Mud volcanoes are often pictured as dramatic geological phenomena featuring the sudden eruption of large volumes of fiery mud in short, powerful bursts. By examining recent activity at the Lokbatan mud volcano in Azerbaijan, an international team of researchers led by the University of Oslo has found that many eruptions are relatively small and short-lived, producing only modest amounts of material near the crater.

Ancient rocks reveal Earth's past warm periods were cooler than thought

Thu, 07/09/2026 - 20:40
Earth's temperature has been much cooler in the past than previously thought, meaning it could be moving toward the warmest it's ever been.

Earth's deep memory is thawing with the Arctic permafrost, degrading records of our ancient world

Thu, 07/09/2026 - 18:40
Permafrost usually hits the news as a hazard, a planetary risk. When this ice-rich ground thaws, it damages roads and building foundations. It drains lakes and tips trees into drunken forests. It releases greenhouse gases that have been locked in carbon-rich soils for thousands of years, amplifying warming and driving further thaw.

Sensors detect California cliff collapses hours to days before failure, report says

Thu, 07/09/2026 - 18:00
Following a four-year study, scientists at UC San Diego's Scripps Institution of Oceanography released a new report to determine whether an early warning system could detect a landslide before it happens. The "California Coastal Landslide Early Warning Research" report found that a network of in-ground sensors can provide a reliable warning of impending, dangerous landslides with hours to days' notice, but that more work is needed to formalize the findings into an actionable warning system.

Ancient 100-kilometer Himalayan glacier once reached lower than many of India's famous hill stations

Thu, 07/09/2026 - 17:00
A new study published in Quaternary Science Reviews dates the dramatic collapse of one of the largest glaciers ever documented in the Himalayas. The findings overturn a long-held assumption about what sustains wet-climate (monsoon-dominated) glaciers.

Volcanoes and wildfires are adding water vapor to the stratosphere, raising climate concerns

Thu, 07/09/2026 - 16:30
Moderate volcanic eruptions and extreme wildfires since 2005 have led to an increase in the amount of water vapor in the stratosphere, a layer of Earth's atmosphere above the weather-filled troposphere. That's potentially bad news because water vapor here acts like a greenhouse gas that traps heat and changes ozone chemistry.

Fish DNA and 10,000 crystals rewrite Colorado River's Grand Canyon origin story

Thu, 07/09/2026 - 15:20
For more than 150 years, scientists have debated when and how the Colorado River first carved its way through the Grand Canyon. Now, a new study led by researchers at the University of New Mexico offers evidence that the river developed gradually from north to south between 8 million and 4.8 million years ago.

Falling water levels trigger a surge in methane emissions from Mediterranean reservoirs

Thu, 07/09/2026 - 13:40
Continental aquatic ecosystems, such as lakes and reservoirs, occupy a small proportion of Earth's surface but play a significant role in the global carbon cycle. It is estimated that more than 40% of global methane emissions originate from these ecosystems. However, the true scale of these emissions remains uncertain, as most of the available data comes from one-off measurements taken at specific times and locations.

Hidden deep-sea turbulence could alter climate and fisheries within one lifetime

Thu, 07/09/2026 - 09:00
Tiny, invisible swirls and twirls—not much bigger than a coin—deep below the ocean's surface are silently shaping some of the biggest forces shaping our climate: sea level rise, fisheries collapse, extreme flooding and how much carbon dioxide the ocean absorbs.

New deep-sea measurements show how the ocean floor forms

Wed, 07/08/2026 - 22:00
The first-known direct observations of a seafloor spreading event at a mid-ocean ridge in the Indian Ocean are presented in Nature. The observations offer insight into how new oceanic crust is created.

Scientists find gas emissions from rocks may have contributed to ancient climate swings, mass extinctions

Wed, 07/08/2026 - 18:00
An interdisciplinary team from Florida State University's Department of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Science has uncovered new evidence about processes that may have contributed to ancient mass-extinction events, some of the most dramatic ecosystem reorganizations in Earth's history.

More than 90% of key nutrients degrading the Mar Menor lagoon come from recirculated underground flows

Wed, 07/08/2026 - 16:40
More than 90% of the key nutrients degrading the Mar Menor, such as ammonium, phosphorus and silica, do not come from streams or continental groundwater, but rather through a mechanism that has so far been overlooked: Water from the lagoon itself infiltrates the sediments and re-emerges loaded with nutrients that have accumulated over years. This is the conclusion of a recent study carried out by the Institute of Environmental Science and Technology of the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (ICTA-UAB), Spain, which questions the current restoration strategies for the Mar Menor because they do not take this pathway of contamination into account.

Nanoplastics found in Antarctic soils for first time, suggesting long-range atmospheric transport

Wed, 07/08/2026 - 16:30
Microplastic contamination has been a much-discussed topic over the last several years, but contamination from even smaller plastic particles represents another pressing issue. Nanoplastics—defined as being under a micrometer in diameter—may pose an even higher ecological risk because they can travel more easily, cross cellular membranes and easily adsorb other pollutants.

Ancient atmospheric oxygen found in iron ore deposits

Wed, 07/08/2026 - 14:40
How do some of geology's most mysterious iron ore deposits form? This question has preoccupied the geosciences for more than a century. An international research team led by Dr. Stefan Peters from the Leibniz Institute for the Analysis of Biodiversity Change (LIB) has discovered that major iron ore deposits contain traces of oxygen inherited from Earth's ancient atmosphere. The study, now published in Nature Communications, shows that oxygenation of the atmosphere by photosynthesis played a crucial role in the formation of these deposits.

Satellite record reveals US tidal wetland productivity rose 6% in 20 years

Tue, 07/07/2026 - 21:40
Carbon sequestration, climate regulation, biodiversity support and shoreline protection: These are all benefits provided by tidal wetlands. As the climate changes, the amount of carbon captured by these vital ecosystems may be changing as well.

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