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News

A forest on a mountainside has mostly green trees, with sprinkles of autumn red and yellow. A brown mountain is in the distance.
Posted inNews

Antibiotic Resistance Might Get a Boost from Droughts

by Faith Ishii 29 April 202629 April 2026

Drought has the potential to turn normal soils into perfect breeding grounds for antibiotic-resistant bacteria, new research has found.

An iceberg sits in a rough, partially frozen sea near Antarctica.
Posted inNews

Tracing the Path of PFAS Across Antarctica

by Faith Ishii 27 April 202629 April 2026

A new study examines the presence of forever chemicals in one of Earth’s most remote regions.

An aerial view of the Southern Ocean and coastline of Antarctica, which is a brown landmass mostly covered in snow
Posted inNews

Widening Channels and Westerly Winds Together Formed Earth’s Strongest Current

by Faith Ishii 24 April 202629 April 2026

The Antarctic Circumpolar Current could only develop once wind patterns aligned with new ocean passages 34 million years ago, a new study suggests.

Aerial view of muddy flood debris across fields in North Carolina
Posted inNews

Hurricane Helene Ravaged Farmers’ Topsoil. They’re Still Fighting to Build It Back.

by Faith Ishii 23 April 202629 April 2026

“We’re dirt farmers. Our primary job is to tend the dirt. That’s the basis of everything.”

A forest at golden hour
Posted inNews

Location, Location, Location: The “Where” of Reforestation May Matter More Than the Extent

by Faith Ishii 22 April 202623 April 2026

A new study finds that focusing reforestation efforts in strategic locations, such as the tropics, can accomplish global cooling levels comparable to less strategic reforestation efforts covering twice as much area.

Researchers stand in the distance as an orange electrical cord snakes across a dry lake bed in the Great Salt Lake.
Posted inNews

What’s Below the Great Salt Lake? More Water

by Anaise Aristide 21 April 202621 April 2026

Pools of fresh water and salt water not far below the lake bed help explain some of the lake’s curious features, including mineral mounds and reed islands.

A person in an orange jumpsuit and a yellow hard hat takes a tool similar to a hoe to the dark soil they are standing on.
Posted inNews

Cleanup of Battery Recycling Sites May Lower Childhood Lead Exposure

by Faith Ishii 15 April 202615 April 2026

Unsound recycling of lead-acid batteries pollutes the soil around houses and agriculture fields in developing countries. Soil remediation might help in lowering the blood lead levels of children.

Seattle’s Space Needle is seen at dusk, with mountains and an orange sky in the background.
Posted inNews

On the Seattle Fault, the Biggest Quakes Aren’t the Most Likely

by Anaise Aristide 14 April 202617 April 2026

Smaller quakes from secondary faults—which are not included in national seismic hazard modeling—occur more frequently than previously thought.

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 Anaise Aristide 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 Faith Ishii 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.

Posts pagination

1 2 3 … 336 Older posts
Over a dark blue-green square appear the words Special Report: The State of the Science 1 Year On.

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24 April 202623 April 2026
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Hydrothermal Heat Flow as a Window into Subsurface Arc Magmas

28 April 202628 April 2026
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