24/7 News Coverage
March 05, 2017
EARTH OBSERVATION
Taking earth's inner temperature



Cape Cod MA (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
The temperature of Earth's interior affects everything from the movement of tectonic plates to the formation of the planet. A new study led by Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) suggests the mantle - the mostly solid, rocky part of Earth's interior that lies between its super-heated core and its outer crustal layer - may be hotter than previously believed. The new finding, published March 3 in the journal Science, could change how scientists think about many issues in Earth science including ho ... read more

EARLY EARTH
Mollusk graveyards are time machines to oceans' pristine past
Gainesville FL (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
A University of Florida study shows that mollusk fossils provide a reliable measure of human-driven changes in marine ecosystems and shifts in ocean biodiversity across time and space. Collect ... more
CARBON WORLDS
Iron dissolved by air pollution may increase ocean potential to trap carbon
Birmingham UK (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
Iron particles generated by cities and industry are being dissolved by man-made air pollution and washed into the sea - potentially increasing the amount of greenhouse gases that the world's oceans ... more
EARLY EARTH
World's oldest fossils unearthed
London, UK (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
Remains of microorganisms at least 3,770 million years old have been discovered by an international team led by UCL scientists, providing direct evidence of one of the oldest life forms on Earth. Ti ... more
FARM NEWS
Hand-picked specialty crops 'ripe' for precision agriculture techniques
Champaign IL (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
Timing the harvest and transport of highly perishable, hand-picked crops such as strawberries so these delicate products reach consumers at peak flavor and freshness is an intricate dance that partn ... more
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FARM NEWS
Magic cover crop carpet
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
Organic farmers have to make hard choices between protecting soil from erosion and controlling weeds. For example, large-scale organic farming relies heavily on tillage. Tilling breaks up the soil t ... more
WATER WORLD
More bang for the buck
Santa Barbara CA (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
Land-based pollutants have been linked to the degradation of several Hawaiian reefs. Take West Maui, for instance, where coral ecosystems are so impacted that reefs and watersheds have been recogniz ... more
ABOUT US
Catalog of 208 human-caused minerals bolsters argument to declare 'Anthropocene Epoch'
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
Human industry and ingenuity has done more to diversify and distribute minerals on Earth than any development since the rise of oxygen over 2.2 billion years ago, experts say in a paper. The work bo ... more
ABOUT US
100,000-year-old human skulls from east Asia reveal complex mix of trends in time, space
St. Louis, MO (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
Two partial archaic human skulls, from the Lingjing site, Xuchang, central China, provide a new window into the biology and populations patterns of the immediate predecessors of modern humans in eas ... more
FLORA AND FAUNA
Woolly mammoths experienced a genomic meltdown just before extinction
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
Dwindling populations created a "mutational meltdown" in the genomes of the last wooly mammoths, which had survived on an isolated island until a few thousand years ago. Rebekah Rogers and Montgomer ... more
WOOD PILE
Ancient peoples shaped the Amazon rainforest
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
We often think of the Amazon rainforest as a vast expanse of nature untouched by humans. But a new study in Science suggests that's not true - in fact, today's rainforest is shaped by trees that wer ... more


'Super-deep' diamonds may hold new information about Earth's interior

EXO WORLDS
Biochemical 'fossil' shows how life may have emerged without phosphate
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
One major mystery about life's origin is how phosphate became an essential building block of genetic and metabolic machinery in cells, given its poor accessibility on early Earth. In a study publish ... more
EARLY EARTH
Mid-Mesozoic beetle in amber stirs questions on rise of flowering plants and pollinators
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
Named for Charles Darwin, the only known specimen of a newly discovered beetle, Darwinylus marcosi, died in a sticky gob of tree sap some 105 million years ago in what is now northern Spain. A ... more
SHAKE AND BLOW
New USGS Maps Identify Potential Ground-Shaking Hazards in 2017
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
New USGS maps identify potential ground-shaking hazards in 2017 from both human-induced and natural earthquakes in the central and eastern U.S., known as the CEUS. This is the second consecutive yea ... more
ICE WORLD
NASA study improves forecasts of summer Arctic sea ice
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
The Arctic has been losing sea ice over the past several decades as Earth warms. However, each year, as the sea ice starts to melt in the spring following its maximum wintertime extent, scientists s ... more

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McMurdo to enhance U.K. coast guard's search-and-rescue technology
London (UPI) Mar 2, 2017
Orolia subsidiary McMurdo secured a contract to enhance existing search-and-rescue technology for the U.K. Maritime and Coastguard Agency, the company announced Thursday. Under the contract, the company will work to enable U.K. search-and-rescue workers to operate using the new Medium-altitude Earth Orbit Search and Rescue satellites, or MEOSAR, currently being deployed. Work wil ... more
Les Cayes, Haiti (AFP) Feb 27, 2017
Haitians' ire over carnival spending amid hurricane's ruins
Rio De Janeiro (AFP) Feb 24, 2017
Carnival helps Rio put crime, recession on back burner
Ottawa (AFP) Feb 25, 2017
Canada conservationist warns of 'cyber poaching
Scientists demonstrate improved particle warning to protect astronauts
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
Our constantly-changing sun sometimes erupts with bursts of light, solar material, or ultra-fast energized particles - collectively, these events contribute to space weather. In a study published Jan. 30, 2017, in Space Weather, scientists from NASA and the National Center for Atmospheric Research, or NCAR, in Boulder, Colorado, have shown that the warning signs of one type of space weather even ... more
Berkeley CA (SPX) Feb 28, 2017
When Rocket Science Meets X-ray Science
Denver CO (SPX) Feb 28, 2017
York Space partners with Metropolitan State for Denver satellite facility
Washington (UPI) Feb 27, 2017
Raytheon gets $1 billion radar contract for Qatar


Calculating recharge of groundwater more precisely
Freiburg, Germany (SPX) Mar 01, 2017
A team of international researchers led by University of Freiburg hydrologist Dr. Andreas Hartmann suggests that inclusion of currently missing key hydrological processes in large-scale climate change impact models can significantly improve our estimates of water availability. The study shows that groundwater recharge estimates for 560 million people in karst regions in Europe, the Middle ... more
Santa Barbara CA (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
More bang for the buck
London, UK (SPX) Mar 01, 2017
First direct measurements of Pacific seabed sediments reveal strong methane source
Miami (AFP) Feb 27, 2017
New urgency in fight to restore Florida Everglades
Air pollution may have masked mid-20th Century sea ice loss
Washington DC (SPX) Feb 28, 2017
Humans may have been altering Arctic sea ice longer than previously thought, according to researchers studying the effects of air pollution on sea ice growth in the mid-20th Century. The new results challenge the perception that Arctic sea ice extent was unperturbed by human-caused climate change until the 1970s. Scientists have observed Arctic sea ice loss since the mid-1970s and some cli ... more
Paris (AFP) March 1, 2017
UN reports Antarctica's highest temperatures on record
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
NASA study improves forecasts of summer Arctic sea ice
Newark DE (SPX) Feb 28, 2017
International team reports ocean acidification spreading rapidly in Arctic Ocean


Hand-picked specialty crops 'ripe' for precision agriculture techniques
Champaign IL (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
Timing the harvest and transport of highly perishable, hand-picked crops such as strawberries so these delicate products reach consumers at peak flavor and freshness is an intricate dance that partners Mother Nature with manual labor. However, many of the "smart farming" techniques and technologies that help growers harvest more of what they sow faster and more efficiently have focused pri ... more
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
Researchers propose using CRISPR to accelerate plant domestication
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
Magic cover crop carpet
Boca Raton FL (SPX) Feb 27, 2017
SpaceX delivers BAM-FX to ISS for Zero Gravity Solutions
After year of calm, Mt Etna bursts into life
Catania, Italy (AFP) March 1, 2017
/> Mount Etna, the famous Sicilian volcano, has erupted for the first time in more than year. The highest volcano in Europe burst into life on Monday evening and continued to produce fountains of bright orange lava into Tuesday. The relatively small eruption was not sufficiently powerful to cause any problems for residential centres near the peak, on the eastern side of the island, and ... more
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
New USGS Maps Identify Potential Ground-Shaking Hazards in 2017
Santiago (AFP) Feb 27, 2017
Water slowly restored in Chile capital after deadly floods
Miami FL (SPX) Feb 28, 2017
Study targets warm water rings that fuel hurricane intensification


22 dead in DR Congo army clashes with M23 rebels
Goma, Dr Congo (AFP) March 1, 2017
/> The Congolese army said Wednesday it had killed 20 fighters from the M23 militia group and lost two soldiers in clashes with the rebels since the end of January. General Leon Mushale told reporters in the eastern city of Goma that a further 25 rebels either were captured or surrendered and that six soldiers had been injured. The clashes occurred in the eastern part of DR Congo, on an ... more
Dar Es Salaam (AFP) March 1, 2017
Tanzania bans booze sachets
Niamey (AFP) Feb 26, 2017
France sends backup to Niger after 16 troops killed
Bangui, CAR (AFP) Feb 26, 2017
UN airstrikes in C.Africa target 'heavily armed' militia
Mothers dictate lifelong grooming habits in chimps
Cambridge, Mass. (UPI) Mar 1, 2017
According to new research, a chimp's grooming behaviors are instilled by his or her mother, and the ingrained behaviors last a lifetime. "I think what it really shows is how strong the maternal influence is," Richard Wrangham, a professor of biological anthropology at Harvard University, told the Harvard Gazette. "It's very charming, really - our oldest-known son was almost 40 years ol ... more
St. Louis, MO (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
100,000-year-old human skulls from east Asia reveal complex mix of trends in time, space
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
Catalog of 208 human-caused minerals bolsters argument to declare 'Anthropocene Epoch'
Los Angeles CA (SPX) Feb 28, 2017
Newfound primate teeth take a big bite out of the evolutionary tree of life


Just how early is spring arriving in your neighborhood
Washington DC (SPX) Feb 28, 2017
Even Punxsutawaney Phil can't be blamed for being baffled this year and hightailing it back to his burrow. He predicted six more weeks of winter on Feb 2, but by then spring was already springing well ahead of historical norms in much of the USA. While we've known for a over a decade now that climate change is variably advancing the onset of spring across the United States, a new set of ma ... more
Mogadishu (AFP) Feb 28, 2017
Somali president declares 'national disaster' over drought
Exeter, UK (SPX) Feb 22, 2017
Warming ponds could accelerate climate change
Quixeramobim, Brazil (AFP) Feb 21, 2017
Brazil's poorest region suffers worst drought in a century
First-ever global view of transshipment in commercial fishing industry
London, UK (SPX) Feb 24, 2017
Transshipment, the transfer of goods from one boat to another, is a major pathway for illegally caught and unreported fish to enter the global seafood market. It has also been associated with drug smuggling and slave labor. Illegal in many cases, transshipment has been largely invisible and nearly impossible to manage, because it often occurs far from shore and out of sight. Until now. Tod ... more
Paris (ESA) Mar 03, 2017
Sentinel-2B poised for liftoff
Canberra, Australia (SPX) Feb 28, 2017
The Long Shot: Photographing A Milk Carton 3500 Kilometres Away
San Francisco CA (SPX) Feb 27, 2017
MDA to Acquire DigitalGlobe


Did seaweed make us who we are today?
Odense M, Denmark (SPX) Mar 01, 2017
Millions of years ago something happened, allowing early Homo sapiens to branch out from the primitive hominoid family tree. Was this crucial turn in human evolution partly driven by seaweed and its particular content of essential nutrients? Over the past 2.5 - 2 million years human brains have gone through the most significant development, and as a result modern-day humans are left with a ... more
London, UK (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
World's oldest fossils unearthed
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 01, 2017
The oldest fossil giant penguin
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
Mid-Mesozoic beetle in amber stirs questions on rise of flowering plants and pollinators
New Zealand lauded for renewables, but challenges remain
Wellington, New Zealand (UPI) Feb 21, 2017
Even with international praise for its renewable energy strategy, New Zealand's government said there is room for improvement. An annual review of the New Zealand energy sector from the International Energy Agency described the country as a "success story" for its ability to advance on low-carbon options like hydro-electric power and geothermal energy, all without government subsidies. ... more
Strasbourg, France (AFP) Feb 15, 2017
EU parliament backs draft carbon trading reforms
Taipei (AFP) Feb 12, 2017
Taiwan lantern makers go green for festival of lights
Washington (AFP) Feb 8, 2017
Republican ex-top diplomats propose a carbon tax


Getting rid of the last bits of sulfur in fuel
Pasadena CA (SPX) Feb 28, 2017
Scientists led by a team at Caltech have developed a new method for potentially removing nearly all sulfur compounds from gas and diesel fuel. Sulfur compounds in fuels such as gasoline and diesel create air pollution when the fuel is burned. To address that challenge, large-scale oil refinery processes remove the majority of sulfur from fuel down to a government-mandated level. The new te ... more
Houston TX (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
New path suggested for nuclear fusion
Vernon CA (SPX) Feb 28, 2017
Romeo Power expands EV battery pack production in Southern California
Richland WA (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
Tweaking electrolyte makes better lithium-metal batteries
Elephants are insomniacs, sleeping just 2 hours a night
Miami (AFP) March 1, 2017
/> Elephants hardly ever sleep in the wild, getting around two hours of shut-eye per night and only in the wee hours of the morning, researchers said Wednesday. The findings in the journal PLOS ONE are based on two female wild African elephants - living in Botswana's Chobe National Park - who appear to sleep the least of any known mammals to date. Researchers fitted the elephants' tru ... more
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
Woolly mammoths experienced a genomic meltdown just before extinction
Tucson AZ (SPX) Feb 28, 2017
Dogs, toddlers show similarities in social intelligence
Santa Barbara CA (SPX) Feb 28, 2017
Recovering predators and prey
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Beijing's shanties: Towns of hope and despair
Beijing (AFP) March 1, 2017
A nerve centre for migrant workers who stream in from around the country in search of a better life, Black Bridge Village is a place of industry and desperation. Posters on the wall offer easy money for blood donations: 400 ml - almost one US pint - earns between 400 and 500 yuan, enough to pay the rent for a small room. Ramshackle structures of brick, corrugated iron and wood have mu ... more
Hong Kong (AFP) March 1, 2017
Hong Kong rebel lawmakers fight parliament ban
Hong Kong (AFP) Feb 27, 2017
Activists gatecrash meeting of Hong Kong leadership hopeful
Hong Kong (AFP) Feb 28, 2017
China's favourite wins strong backing in Hong Kong leadership race
Indigenous protest in Honduras marks activist's murder
Tegucigalpa (AFP) March 1, 2017
/> About 600 mostly indigenous Hondurans held a protest in front of the Supreme Court on Wednesday to mark the anniversary of murdered activist Berta Caceres and further her campaign against a hydroelectric company. "Long live Berta. The struggle continues," yelled the crowd, which included workers, villagers, women and rights activists. The demonstration was held nearly a year after th ... more
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 03, 2017
Ancient peoples shaped the Amazon rainforest
Bristol, UK (SPX) Feb 28, 2017
Forests to play major role in meeting Paris climate targets
Stirling, UK (SPX) Feb 24, 2017
Forests worldwide threatened by drought




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