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News

A huge, still-smoldering burn scar dominates an aerial image of a forest, with green forest still visible at right.
Posted inNews

Alaska’s Wildfires Heat the Planet, but Canada’s Cool It

by Saugat Bolakhe 9 April 20269 April 2026

Using 2 decades of satellite data, researchers learned that wildfires in North America don’t follow the same script: In western Canada, snow reflectivity drives a cooling effect, whereas in Alaska, permafrost burning leads to net warming.

The dusty, dark gray surface of asteroid Ryugu is scattered with boulders and a few craters.
Posted inNews

Asteroid Hosts All Ingredients for DNA and RNA

by Matthew R. Francis 8 April 20268 April 2026

Samples collected from asteroid Ryugu contain the four genetic “letters” of DNA, reinforcing the hypothesis that the chemical origins of life were present when the solar system began.

Yellow light shines through a layer of clouds onto the ocean below. A volcano is visible, in silhouette, in the distance.
Posted inNews

A Peculiar Polymer Paired with Sunlight Could Remove PFAS

by Emily Gardner 7 April 20267 April 2026

A new photocatalyst might help take the “forever” out of “forever chemicals” present in water.

Lead remnants found in household dust
Posted inNews

Oceans Are Absorbing the Earth’s Excess Energy. That’s Bad News for Food Systems.

by Frida Garza 6 April 20266 April 2026

As the planet traps more energy than it releases, the pathways for global food production are being upended.

The Sun shines through the edges of Titan’s atmosphere, making it look like a ring of fire in black and white. In the foreground, Saturn’s concentric rings are brightly lit.
Posted inNews

Titanic Shake-Up Could Explain Saturn’s Young Rings and Strange Moons

by Matthew R. Francis 2 April 20262 April 2026

A new model shows how the migration of Titan could have destroyed another moon, creating Saturn’s rings and the moon Hyperion. And, the model suggests, this all happened in the past billion years.

The U.S. Supreme Court building is seen during the daytime.
Posted inNews

Climate Science Has No Place in Scientific Reference Manual for Judges, Attorneys General Say

by Emily Gardner 31 March 202631 March 2026

A chapter on climate science has been removed from a manual designed to be an independent, neutral source of scientific information for judges.

Small, tented archaeological dig in the middle of a sunny green field.
Posted inNews

Ancient Maya Wetlands Reveal Settlement That Thrived Amid “Collapse”

by Taylor Mitchell Brown 30 March 202630 March 2026

A newly excavated site provides evidence that Maya communities migrated from urban areas to rural wetlands during times of intense drought.

An aerial photo shows a snow- and ice-covered mountain range.
Posted inENGAGE, News

As Ice Recedes and Land Rebounds, Antarctica’s Mineral Resources Come into Focus

by Grace van Deelen 30 March 202630 March 2026

Melting ice, rebounding land, and rising seas will change what resources are available in Antarctica, a new analysis finds.

A video shows a blue circle against a darker blue background. Within the circle, waves of pale blue billow out from the center and create static throughout the circle.
Posted inNews

Solar Flare Spotlights the Martian Ionosphere

Damond Benningfield, Science Writer by Damond Benningfield 27 March 202627 March 2026

A “lucky” linkup between orbiters helped scientists study how the Red Planet’s ionosphere responds to solar events.

Two maps of Earth show areas highlighted in red and blue. In the image called “nonelliptical geoid,” the darkest blue area is in the Indian Ocean. In the image labeled “nonhydrostatic geoid,” the darkest blue area is over Antarctica.
Posted inNews

Scientists Remap Earth’s Gravity

by Tom Metcalfe 26 March 202626 March 2026

An uncommon way of looking at the world reveals the evolution of a deep gravity hole beneath Antarctica.

Posts pagination

1 2 3 … 335 Older posts
Over a dark blue-green square appear the words Special Report: The State of the Science 1 Year On.

Features from AGU Publications

Research Spotlights

How Internal Waves Transport Energy Thousands of Miles Across the Ocean

26 March 202626 March 2026
Editors' Highlights

Resolved Storm-Environment Interactions: Linking Local to Global Scales

9 April 20266 April 2026
Editors' Vox

Distant Cousins? How Field Work on Earth Could Help Us to Better Understand Titan

9 April 20268 April 2026
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