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Updated: 4 hours 48 min ago

Analysis reveals phytoplankton's contribution to centuries-long ocean carbon storage

Fri, 08/22/2025 - 17:04
Phytoplankton—microscopic algae that form the base of ocean food webs—have long been viewed as transient players in the global carbon cycle: They bloom, die, and the carbon they contain is quickly recycled back into the ecosystem.

Study confirms that properties adjacent to tornado destruction initially plunge in value

Fri, 08/22/2025 - 15:30
The power of a tornado can inflict tremendous damage on residential property, but the impact is also felt by nearby homeowners, even when their property is unscathed.

US already has the critical minerals it needs—but they're being thrown away, new analysis shows

Fri, 08/22/2025 - 15:15
All the critical minerals the U.S. needs annually for energy, defense and technology applications are already being mined at existing U.S. facilities, according to a new analysis published in the journal Science.

3D X-ray study reveals how rock grains move and stress builds

Thu, 08/21/2025 - 21:13
A team of Johns Hopkins researchers is using an innovative X-ray imaging approach to reveal how compression reshapes the tiny spaces and stresses within sandstone—findings that could predict how this common rock used for fuel reservoirs behaves under deep subterranean pressure. The results appear in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth.

How moisture changes the rules of atmospheric blocking

Thu, 08/21/2025 - 21:08
New research from Purdue University reveals how moisture influences atmospheric blocking, a phenomenon that often drives heat waves, droughts, cold outbreaks and floods, helping solve a mystery in climate science and improving future extreme weather predictions.

Beyond Arrakis: Dune researchers confront real-life perils of shifting sand formations

Thu, 08/21/2025 - 19:30
Last summer, Stephanie McNamara got her first glimpse of Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve in southern Colorado. The park is a monument to sand, where dunes stretch across 30 square miles and tower nearly 750 feet high, making them the tallest such formations in North America.

New AI tool tracks early signs of hurricane formation

Thu, 08/21/2025 - 18:42
A research team has developed a new artificial intelligence (AI) tool that can automatically identify and track tropical easterly waves (TEWs)—clusters of clouds and wind that often develop into hurricanes—and separate them from two major tropical wind patterns: the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) and the monsoon trough (MT).

Sediment analysis challenges view that rise of plants triggered shift from braided to meandering rivers

Thu, 08/21/2025 - 18:00
A new Stanford study challenges the decades-old view that the rise of land plants half a billion years ago dramatically changed the shapes of rivers.

A global wildfire paradox: Human impacts worsen even as total burned area declines

Thu, 08/21/2025 - 18:00
Researchers at the University of California, Irvine and other institutions have spotted a contradiction in worldwide wildfire trends: Despite a 26% decline in total burned area from 2002 to 2021, the number of people exposed to wildfires has surged by nearly 40%.

Reports from 65 years of snow and avalanche research now digitized

Thu, 08/21/2025 - 16:12
Lib4RI has completed the digitization of more than 700 historical snow and avalanche reports from the WSL Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research SLF. These reports, published between 1938 and 2005, document decades of avalanche observations and snow research by researchers from Switzerland and around the world. These reports are now accessible to all in the institutional repository DORA.

Heat-stressed Australian forests are thinning fast, producing carbon emissions

Thu, 08/21/2025 - 15:27
Heat-stressed Victorian mountain ash forests are thinning fast, turning from carbon sinks to carbon sources, new research reveals.

Human disturbances drive significant soil carbon loss in hyper-arid deserts, study reveals

Thu, 08/21/2025 - 15:13
A recent study led by Prof. Zeng Fanjiang from the Xinjiang Institute of Ecology and Geography of the Chinese Academy of Sciences has revealed concerning trends in soil organic carbon (SOC) loss due to prolonged human disturbance in hyper-arid desert ecosystems.

Groundwater: How scientists explore the mysteries of ancient aquifers

Thu, 08/21/2025 - 15:04
Beneath Australia's soils lie ancient aquifers which supply 30% of the water consumed across the country. The groundwater they hold can be some of the oldest water on the planet, dating back as far as two million years.

Big quakes in lower North Island 'clustered' in time, study shows

Thu, 08/21/2025 - 14:21
Large earthquakes along some of New Zealand's major faults are commonly clustered in time and place, according to recent research.

Scientists discover how heat 'awakens' carbon food source for deep Earth biosphere

Thu, 08/21/2025 - 13:41
Deep beneath the ocean's surface lies Earth's largest carbon reservoir: marine sediments that have accumulated organic matter over millions of years. Long assumed to be permanently "locked away," this vast carbon pool is far more dynamic than scientists previously believed, according to a new international study.

At Mono Lake, visitors witness the stark toll of LA's water use

Thu, 08/21/2025 - 12:19
At a trailhead surrounded by sagebrush, a naturalist welcomes a group of visitors to Mono Lake beside a sign that reads "Oasis in the Desert."

Asia steps into the global carbon cycle conversation

Thu, 08/21/2025 - 08:00
A deeper look into carbon flux is now possible—thanks to a deep pool of scientific collaboration. And for once, the spotlight is on Asia.

A 2022 Pacific volcano eruption made a deep dive into Alaska

Thu, 08/21/2025 - 05:57
Atmospheric waves from a massive 2022 South Pacific volcanic eruption created seismic waves that penetrated Earth to at least 5 kilometers in Alaska, creating an opportunity to employ an unusual method of peering into the state's deep subsurface.

Ozone will warm planet more than first thought, study finds

Wed, 08/20/2025 - 23:10
The world will warm more than expected due to future changes in ozone, which protects the Earth from harmful sun rays but also traps heat as it is a greenhouse gas.

Microbial carbon use efficiency rises after abrupt permafrost thaw, study finds

Wed, 08/20/2025 - 20:33
Thawing permafrost is a major climate risk due to the associated release of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases (GHGs). However, new research by a team led by Prof. Yang Yuanhe from the Institute of Botany of the Chinese Academy of Sciences shows how microbes can stabilize soil carbon and potentially weaken the climate risk.

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