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News

A bird is perched on top of a solar panel.
Posted inNews

For the Birds: Solar Panels over Peatlands May Increase Avian Biodiversity

by Larissa G. Capella 15 July 202615 July 2026

A new study finds an unusual mix of bird species thriving in a German solar park built on degraded peatland.

A large red buoy sits on the deck of a ship.
Posted inNews

Changes in Funding Could Tank Quality of Ocean Heat Content Data

by Grace van Deelen 13 July 202613 July 2026

An uncertain funding landscape threatens the longevity of an ocean observation system critical to projecting tropical storms, sea level rise, and more.

People raft down a flooded residential street in Houston in the aftermath of Hurricane Beryl.
Posted inNews

Calculating the Costs of Wetland Loss

by Rebecca Owen 9 July 20269 July 2026

Wetlands protect communities and ecosystems from flooding. A new study quantifies their financial importance.

A map shows the topography of Antarctica under its ice sheets. Elevations range from 2,000 meters below sea level to 2,000 meters above sea level.
Posted inNews

The Breakup of Gondwana Over 100 Million Years Ago May Be Why Antarctica Has Ice Today

by Grace van Deelen 2 July 20266 July 2026

A rift event set off a domino effect of geologic processes that created conditions ripe for Antarctica’s glaciation, a new study suggests.

A beaver’s head sticks out from the surface of a pond as it swims.
Posted inNews

How Beavers Gnawed Their Way into the Arctic

by Grace van Deelen 30 June 202630 June 2026

Historical data on beavers’ Arctic expansion are lacking, but tree rings are shedding light on the timeline.

A small lake is seen in the foreground, with a grand mountain range in the background.
Posted inNews

Pay Dirt: How Colonialism Left Its Mark on the Soil of the American Southwest

by Jonathan Feakins 29 June 202629 June 2026

An alpine lake holds traces of how Spanish conquistadors kicked up dust as they colonized the Southwest.

A patch of trees is viewed from the forest floor looking up at the canopy.
Posted inNews

Fragmented Forests Sequester Less Carbon

by Andrew Chapman 25 June 202625 June 2026

New research has revealed that larger, unified forests store more carbon than the same area of fragmented patches.

A very blurry gray blob on a black background
Posted inNews

Oddball Moon Might Be a Neptune Original After All

by Matthew R. Francis 25 June 202625 June 2026

Infrared observations of Nereid hint that it might have formed in orbit around Neptune, unlike most of the planet’s other satellites.

A black-and-white image shows long grooves carved into a landscape.
Posted inNews

Iceberg Scours Reveal Ancient Wind Patterns

Katherine Kornei, Science Writer by Katherine Kornei 23 June 202623 June 2026

Scour marks left by icebergs that ran aground thousands of years ago record the winds blowing off the Laurentide Ice Sheet.

A capuchin monkey, which has a brown body and a white face, grips the trunk of a narrow tree and looks at the camera with big, sad eyes.
Posted inNews

Climate Extremes May Be Reshaping Monkeys’ Social Structures

by Roberto González 18 June 202618 June 2026

Large groups have their pros and cons. But a changing climate may push them off balance.

Posts pagination

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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 Tides and River Water Combine to Amplify Floods

14 July 202614 July 2026
Editors' Highlights

A Satellite-Based Global Carbon Flux Product is Sensitive to Droughts 

8 July 20266 July 2026
Editors' Vox

Small-Scale Indian Ocean Dynamics Underpin Marine Ecology and Climate

4 June 20263 June 2026
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