Studying Ecosystems of the Future Todayby Michelle Dotzert, PhDUnique wetland chambers and biogeochemistry techniques model the future of coastal wetlands
Organic Material from Mars Reveals the Likely Origin of Life’s Building Blocksby University of Copenhagen
NewsNew Tool Enables El Niño Forecasting Up to 18 Monthsby University of HawaiiThe conceptual model is comparable to the best AI forecasts
NewsAtmospheric CO2 Affects Temperature More than Previously Thoughtby Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea ResearchDoubling CO2 in the atmosphere could increase average temperature by 14 degrees
NewsMapping the World's Salted Soils: A Leap Forward in Combatting Land Degradationby Journal of Remote SensingHigh-resolution global soil salinity map provides an essential tool for scientists, policymakers, and farmers
NewsMarine Researchers Describe Previously Unknown Part of Geological Carbon Cycleby Woods Hole Oceanographic InstitutionResearchers studying ocean transform faults gain novel insight into carbon cycling between Earth’s mantle and the ocean
NewsConfirmation of Ancient Lake on Mars Builds Excitement for Rover’s Samplesby University of California - Los AngelesFindings reveal eons of environmental changes and offer hope that the rover’s soil and rock samples hold traces of life
NewsStalagmites as Climate Archiveby Heidelberg UniversityResearchers from Heidelberg and Karlsruhe use stalagmite to reconstruct regional and global climate history
NewsCollaboration between Women Helps Close the Gender Gap in Ice Core Scienceby University of AlbertaAnalyzing the evolution of women's participation in ice core research
NewsThe Remains of an Ancient Planet Lie Deep within Earthby California Institute of TechnologyPreviously detected blobs of unusual material in the Earth's center could be the remains of an ancient planet
NewsAlpine Rock Reveals Dynamics of Plate Movements in Earth’s Interiorby Goethe University FrankfurtGeological analysis of whiteschist shows rapid upward movements, conflicting with previous assumptions
NewsEarth’s Crust, Tectonic Plates Gradually Formed, Geoscientists Findby Penn StateResearch suggests that the Earth’s crust continued a slow process of reworking for billions of years