24/7 News Coverage
April 02, 2018
CLIMATE SCIENCE
Some US states press ahead on climate change goals, despite Trump



Washington (AFP) April 1, 2018
US President Donald Trump has taken an axe to the environmental regulations he inherited from his predecessor Barack Obama, cutting dozens of rules ranging from fracking on public land to protections for endangered species. Yet supporters of the Paris climate change accord believe state-level efforts could mean the US will meet greenhouse gas emissions targets envisaged under the landmark agreement, despite being the only country to announce its withdrawal. Automobile fuel and emission standards ... read more

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Boat carrying Rohingya stops on Thai island: official
Bangkok (AFP) April 1, 2018
A boat carrying dozens of Rohingya refugees trying to reach Malaysia briefly stopped on a Thai island, an official said Sunday, as fears grow about overcrowded camps for the stateless minority fleeing violence in Myanmar. ... more
CLIMATE SCIENCE
Two degrees no longer seen as global warming guardrail
Paris (AFP) April 1, 2018
Limiting global warming to two degrees Celsius will not prevent destructive and deadly climate impacts, as once hoped, dozens of experts concluded in a score of scientific studies released Monday. ... more
SHAKE AND BLOW
Super typhoon may flood one third of central Tokyo: survey
Tokyo (AFP) March 31, 2018
One third of central Tokyo could be left under water and nearly four million people affected if a super typhoon strikes the capital causing storm surges, a new study from local authorities has warned. ... more
SHAKE AND BLOW
At least four dead as Cyclone Josie hits Fiji
Wellington (AFP) April 1, 2018
At least four people were killed and another was missing in Fiji after Cyclone Josie caused severe flooding in the South Pacific island nation, local media reported. ... more
24/7 Disaster News Coverage




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WHALES AHOY
Japan whalers return from Antarctic hunt after killing 333 whales
Tokyo (AFP) March 31, 2018
Japanese whaling vessels returned to port on Saturday after catching more than 300 of the mammals in the Antarctic Ocean without facing any protests by anti-whaling groups, officials said. ... more
PILLAGING PIRATES
S. Korea deploys warship to Ghana after pirates kidnap sailors
Seoul (AFP) April 1, 2018
South Korea has deployed an anti-piracy warship to the sea off Ghana after three South Korean sailors were kidnapped by pirates, Seoul's foreign ministry said late Saturday. ... more
WHITE OUT
Three Spaniards die in Swiss avalanche
Geneva (AFP) April 1, 2018
Three Spanish cross-country skiers died after being engulfed by an avalanche in the Swiss Alps, police said Sunday. ... more
AFRICA NEWS
Four Ugandans killed in Shabaab attack on AU base in Somalia
Mogadishu (AFP) April 1, 2018
Heavily-armed Al-Shabaab militants attacked an African Union military camp outside Mogadishu on Sunday, killing four Ugandan peacekeepers, their army said. ... more
EARLY EARTH
Earth's water present before impact formed moon, study finds
Washington (UPI) Mar 29, 2018
Based on an extensive collection of lunar and terrestrial samples, researchers have determined that most of the water on Earth was already present at the time of the impact that created the moon. ... more
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ABOUT US
Scientists find 13,000-year-old footprints in Canada
Washington (UPI) Mar 29, 2018
Researchers have uncovered 29 human footprints from around 13,000 years ago off Canada's Pacific coast. ... more
ABOUT US
Parts of the Amazon thought uninhabited were home to a million people
Exeter UK (SPX) Mar 30, 2018
Parts of the Amazon previously thought to have been almost uninhabited were really home to thriving populations of up to a million people, new research shows. Archaeologists have uncovered evi ... more
WATER WORLD
Powerful X-rays key to confirming water source deep below Earth's surface
Lemont, IL (SPX) Mar 30, 2018
A study published in Science last week relies on extremely bright X-ray beams from the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Advanced Photon Source (APS) at Argonne National Laboratory to confirm the pr ... more
CLIMATE SCIENCE
New interactive map shows climate change everywhere in world
Cincinnati OH (SPX) Mar 30, 2018
What does Salt Lake City have in common with Tehran? More than you might think, if you're a climate scientist. University of Cincinnati geography professor Tomasz Stepinski created a new ... more
TECH SPACE
3-DIY: Printing your own bioprinter
Pittsburgh PA (SPX) Mar 30, 2018
Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University have developed a low-cost 3-D bioprinter by modifying a standard desktop 3-D printer, and they have released the breakthrough designs as open source so that ... more


Environmentally friendly cattle production

WHITE OUT
NASA satellite spots Eastern Europe's orange snow
Washington (UPI) Mar 27, 2018
It looks like a giant creamsicle melted across the mountains of Russia, Bulgaria, Romania and Ukraine. ... more
24/7 News Coverage



DISASTER MANAGEMENT
In Fukushima ghost town, a factory on the road to rebirth
Namie, Japan (AFP) March 30, 2018
Namie in Japan's Fukushima region remains a virtual ghost town seven years after a devastating tsunami and nuclear disaster, but officials hope a new factory recycling electric car batteries could help revitalise the area. ... more
DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Where Chinese space station Tiangong falls to Earth still a mystery
Washington (UPI) Mar 30, 2018
The best guess of expert astronomers and space junk-trackers is that China's decommissioned, out-of-control space station, Tiangong-1, will reenter Earth's atmosphere anywhere between late Friday night and Sunday. ... more
AFRICA NEWS
Sahara has grown 10% in 100 years, research finds
Washington (UPI) Mar 30, 2018
Africa's Sahara Desert has grown 10 percent in nearly 100 years, according to a new study by scientists at the University of Maryland. ... more
WATER WORLD
New research shows how submarine groundwater affects coral reef growth
Honolulu, Hawaii (SPX) Mar 29, 2018
Groundwater that seeps into the coastal zone beneath the ocean's surface - termed submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) - is an important source of fresh water and nutrients to nearshore coral reefs ... more
WOOD PILE
Palm trees are spreading northward - how far will they go?
New York NY (SPX) Mar 27, 2018
What does it take for palm trees, the unofficial trademark of tropical landscapes, to expand into northern parts of the world that have long been too cold for palm trees to survive? A new study, led ... more
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Fearing worst, French 'preppers' gear up for the Day After
Paris (AFP) March 23, 2018
When the end comes, ex-army signaller Daniel will calmly fire up the generator, flip on the water purifier, gather eggs from his chickens and watch in serene self-sufficiency as society tears itself apart. "I'm preparing myself for risks, floods, earthquakes, avalanches or social breakdown," says the sixty-something father, hunter and self-styled survivor from the French Alps. Daniel, wh ... more
+ Former Supreme Court justice backs repealing Second Amendment
+ Where Chinese space station Tiangong falls to Earth still a mystery
+ In Fukushima ghost town, a factory on the road to rebirth
+ US says others should pay bigger share of UN peacekeeping bill
+ Volcanic eruption influenced Iceland's conversion to Christianity
+ Haiti installs leaders of reborn army
+ Boat carrying Rohingya stops on Thai island: official
Point Nemo, Earth's watery graveyard for spacecraft
Paris (AFP) March 30, 2018
Chinese space scientists were not in control of their Tiangong-1 orbiting laboratory when it hurtled back to Earth and into a remote part of the Pacific Ocean on Monday. But if they had been, that's where they would have tried to make it land. By sheer fluke, anything that didn't burn up in the atmosphere is expected to have plopped down somewhere near the forlorn spot that is amongst the most remote places on the planet. ... more
+ Raytheon awarded contract for AN/ALR-69A radar receiver system
+ New device uses biochemistry techniques to detect rare radioactive decays
+ 3-DIY: Printing your own bioprinter
+ Taming chaos: Calculating probability in complex systems
+ Researchers create microlaser that flies along hollow optical fiber
+ Pressing a button is more challenging than appears
+ Femtosecond laser fabrication: Realizing dynamics control of electrons


Automated sea vehicles for monitoring the oceans
Paris (ESA) Mar 28, 2018
A new company from ESA's UK business incubator has developed an autonomous boat that is propelled by the waves and carries ocean sensors powered by solar energy. Advances in ocean monitoring are improving our understanding of the seas and environment, including marine life, sea temperatures, pollution and weather. However, fuel, maintenance and manpower for research ships are costly, and s ... more
+ Most of Earth's water was likely present before the moon-forming giant impact
+ New research shows how submarine groundwater affects coral reef growth
+ Deep-sea wildlife more vulnerable to extinction than first thought
+ Smithsonian researchers name new ocean zone: The rariphotic
+ Coral reef experiment shows: Acidification from carbon dioxide slows growth
+ Water's behavioral anomalies finally explained
+ Powerful X-rays key to confirming water source deep below Earth's surface
NASA Begins Latest Airborne Arctic Ice Survey
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Mar 27, 2018
An unusual hole in the sea ice cover over the Arctic Ocean and unexplored areas of the bedrock beneath the Greenland Ice Sheet are among the targets for this year's mapping of Arctic ice conditions by NASA's Operation IceBridge airborne mission. On March 22, NASA completed the first IceBridge flight of its spring Arctic campaign with a survey of sea ice north of Greenland. This year marks ... more
+ Team discovers a significant role for nitrate in the Arctic landscape
+ Arctic Wintertime Sea Ice Extent Is Among Lowest On Record
+ UNH researchers find landscape ridges may hold clues about ice age and climate change
+ Another season, another historic low for Arctic wintertime sea ice
+ Germany was blanketed by ice some 450,000 years ago
+ Geoengineering polar glaciers to slow sea-level rise
+ Arctic sea ice becoming a spring hazard for North Atlantic ships


El Nino can affect up to two-thirds of the world's harvests
Helsinki, Finland (SPX) Mar 29, 2018
According to researchers at Aalto University, Finland, large-scale weather cycles, such as the one related to the El Nino phenomenon, affect two-thirds of the world's cropland. In these so called climate oscillations, air pressure, sea level temperature or other similar factors fluctuate regularly in areas far apart in a way that causes rain and temperature patterns to shift significantly. ... more
+ Breakthrough in battle against rice blast
+ Silk Road nomads were the original foodies
+ Agriculture initiated by indigenous peoples, not Fertile Crescent migration
+ Environmentally friendly cattle production
+ Scientists to publish first-ever land health report
+ Absence of ants suggests first Saharan farming 10,000 years ago
+ French food fest wants to whet the world's appetite
At least four dead as Cyclone Josie hits Fiji
Wellington (AFP) April 1, 2018
At least four people were killed and another was missing in Fiji after Cyclone Josie caused severe flooding in the South Pacific island nation, local media reported. Much of the main tourist town of Nadi was underwater as Josie, with wind gusts up to 100 kilometres per hour (60 mph) caused widespread flooding before moving away from the island group. Police director of operations Livai D ... more
+ Super typhoon may flood one third of central Tokyo: survey
+ 6.4 quake off eastern Indonesia, tsunami alert lifted
+ Seismologists introduce new measure of earthquake ruptures
+ 20 dead as powerful storm hits Madagascar
+ 17 die in Madagascar tropical storm
+ Researchers record sound of volcanic thunder for the first time
+ An extra half degree of global warming could displace 5 million people


Four Ugandans killed in Shabaab attack on AU base in Somalia
Mogadishu (AFP) April 1, 2018
Heavily-armed Al-Shabaab militants attacked an African Union military camp outside Mogadishu on Sunday, killing four Ugandan peacekeepers, their army said. Local sources said a massive blast was heard in the Bulomarer district, around 150 kilometres (93 miles) south of Mogadishu, and fighting broke out after dozens of heavily armed Shabaab militants stormed the base. "The heavy blast str ... more
+ Sahara has grown 10% in 100 years, research finds
+ Ghana protestors rally against US military deal
+ Mali's PM tackles terrorism, farmer-herder clashes
+ UN strengthens role of DR Congo mission in elections
+ Canada aims for August Mali deployment of Blue Helmets: minister
+ In war-torn C.Africa, Russia trains army in weapons use
+ Chad soldier, 20 Boko Haram fighters killed in clash: army source
Parts of the Amazon thought uninhabited were home to a million people
Exeter UK (SPX) Mar 30, 2018
Parts of the Amazon previously thought to have been almost uninhabited were really home to thriving populations of up to a million people, new research shows. Archaeologists have uncovered evidence that there were hundreds of villages in the rainforest away from major rivers, and they were home to different communities speaking varied languages who had an impact on the environment around t ... more
+ Scientists find 13,000-year-old footprints in Canada
+ How infighting turns toxic for chimpanzees
+ Being human: Antony Gormley's new bodies
+ Progress in quest to develop a human memory prosthesis
+ When the Mediteranean Sea flooded human settlements
+ Scientists discover evidence of early human innovation, pushing back evolutionary timeline
+ New insights into the late history of Neandertals


New climate model developed by Russian and German scientists
Kazan, Russia (SPX) Mar 29, 2018
Professor Aleksey Eliseev, Chief Research Associate at Kazan University's Near Space Research Lab, comments, "To find solutions for some tasks in climate research, we need calculations for hundreds, thousands, or even millions of years. Such tasks are, for example, ice age periodization. Another group of tasks that requires huge longitudinal calculations is climate forecasting, a type of researc ... more
+ Canada to miss 2020 climate target: audit
+ New interactive map shows climate change everywhere in world
+ Some US states press ahead on climate change goals, despite Trump
+ Two degrees no longer seen as global warming guardrail
+ Dead tress across Mongolian lava field offer clues to past droughts
+ Cilmatologists render drought predictions that help avert famine
+ Warming could threaten half of species in 33 key areas: report
A space window to electrifying science
Paris (ESA) Mar 27, 2018
Lightning triggers powerful electrical bursts in Earth's atmosphere almost every second. The inner workings of these magnificent forces of nature are still unknown, but a rare observation by an ESA astronaut gave a boost to the science community. A European detector will take on the challenge of hunting for thunderstorms from space next week. As he flew over India at 28 800 km/h on the Int ... more
+ The saga of India's remote sensing satellite network
+ NASA renews focus on Earth's frozen regions
+ Proba-1 spots Giza pyramids from space
+ Sentinel-3B launch preparations in full swing
+ Research shows fertilization drives global lake emissions of greenhouse gases
+ New NASA Model Finds Landslide Threats in Near Real-Time During Heavy Rains
+ New technologies and computing power to help strengthen population data


Earth's water present before impact formed moon, study finds
Washington (UPI) Mar 29, 2018
Based on an extensive collection of lunar and terrestrial samples, researchers have determined that most of the water on Earth was already present at the time of the impact that created the moon. Scientists from the United States, Britain and France studied moon rocks brought back to Earth by astronauts on the six Apollo missions and volcanic rocks retrieved from the ocean floor by Eart ... more
+ Reptile with massive jaws lived in Connecticut 200 million years ago
+ Genetic analysis uncovers the evolutionary origin of vertebrate limbs
+ Evidence for a giant flood in the central Mediterranean Sea
+ Two-billion-year-old salt rock reveals rise of oxygen in ancient atmosphere
+ The early bird got to fly: Archaeopteryx was an active flyer
+ Pterosaurs went out with a bang, not a whimper
+ Are palaeontologists naming too many species?
Lights out for world landmarks in nod to nature
Paris (AFP) March 22, 2018
World landmarks from the Eiffel Tower to the Empire State Building will go dark this weekend to support the fight against climate change and highlight the dangers mankind poses to nature. The 11th edition of Earth Hour, an annual bid to raise awareness about climate change caused by burning fossil fuels, will see iconic structures cut the lights at a time when global temperatures are the hig ... more
+ Puerto Rico power grid snaps, nearly 1 million in the dark
+ Grids from Turkmenistan, Afghanistan and Pakistan could be connected
+ Coal phase-out: Announcing CO2-pricing triggers divestment
+ State utilities called to pass U.S. tax benefits to consumers
+ Magnetic liquids improve energy efficiency of buildings
+ US energy watchdog rejects plan to subsidize coal, nuclear sectors
+ U.S. utility regulator ponders grid reliability


A new way to find better battery materials
Boston MA (SPX) Mar 30, 2018
A new approach to analyzing and designing new ion conductors - a key component of rechargeable batteries - could accelerate the development of high-energy lithium batteries, and possibly other energy storage and delivery devices such as fuel cells, researchers say. The new approach relies on understanding the way vibrations move through the crystal lattice of lithium ion conductors and cor ... more
+ Researchers charge ahead to develop better batteries
+ Superconductivity in an alloy with quasicrystal structure
+ Shedding light on the mystery of the superconducting dome
+ New valve technology promises cheaper, greener engines
+ Thermally driven spin current in DNA
+ Quantum spin liquid prepared for the first time
+ Mapping battery materials with atomic precision
Mass extinction with prior warning
Nuremberg, Germany (SPX) Mar 29, 2018
Mass extinctions throughout the history of the Earth have been well documented. Scientists believe that they occurred during a short period of time in geological terms. In a new study, palaeobiologists at Friedrich-Alexander-Universitat Erlangen-Nurnberg (FAU) and their research partners have now shown that signs that the largest mass extinction event in the Earth's history was approaching becam ... more
+ Researchers investigate if Hurricane Harvey helped fire ants spread in Texas
+ Take a walk on New York's wild side
+ Structure is decisive to algae
+ Spiders, scorpions use leg genes to grow their heads
+ Indonesian 'house pet' orangutans rescued by activists
+ After warnings of species plight: solutions in sight
+ Olive ridley turtles hatch in Mumbai after two decades
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Vatican-affiliated Chinese bishop arrested: report
Vatican City (AFP) March 27, 2018
A Chinese bishop recognised by the Vatican has been arrested in his diocese just as Beijing and the Holy See are set to confirm a historic agreement on the appointment of bishops, a Vatican-linked website reported. AsiaNews, run by the Pontifical Institute for Foreign Missions - a missionary society recognised by the Vatican - wrote on Tuesday that Vincent Guo Xijin, bishop of the diocese ... more
+ China court accuses Anbang boss of stealing billions as trial opens
+ Street art makes a splash in Hong Kong
+ China to reorganise propaganda efforts at home and abroad
+ Xi gets second term with powerful ally as VP
+ China slams UK warnings about Hong Kong liberties
+ Hong Kong's richest man Li Ka-shing to retire
+ Hong Kong mulls three years' jail for anthem disrespect
Soil fungi may help determine the resilience of forests to environmental change
Santa Cruz CA (SPX) Mar 27, 2018
Nature is rife with symbiotic relationships, some of which take place out of sight, like the rich underground exchange of nutrients that occurs between trees and soil fungi. But what happens in the dark may have profound implications above ground, too: A major new study reveals that soil fungi could play a significant role in the ability of forests to adapt to environmental change. K ... more
+ Drought-induced changes in forest composition amplify effects of climate change
+ Palm trees are spreading northward - how far will they go?
+ Amazon deforestation is close to tipping point
+ New life for Portugal's oldest forest ravaged by fires
+ Invasive beetle threatens Japan's famed cherry blossoms
+ US, EU hardwood imports fuel Amazon destruction: Greenpeace
+ Latin America's 'magic tree' slowly coming back to life


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