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News

Melting Arctic sea ice at Pond Inlet, Nunavut, Canada.
Posted inNews

Concern About Climate Change Drives Arctic Council Meeting

by Randy Showstack 16 May 201719 April 2023

Actions taken by ministers at the meeting included an agreement on international Arctic scientific cooperation and adoption of recommendations of a report on the region’s changing state.

Palm trees blow sideways in tropical storm.
Posted inNews

NOAA Officials Stress Hurricane Danger and Storm Safety

by Randy Showstack 12 May 201716 September 2022

Agency scientists on a Hurricane Awareness Tour showcase NOAA research capabilities and warn that although winds can cause severe damage, the biggest killers are storm surges and inland flooding.

An artist’s impression shows the view from the surface of one of the seven worlds that circle the cool dwarf star TRAPPIST-1.
Posted inNews

A New Theory May Explain “Impossible” TRAPPIST-1 Planets

Shannon Hall by S. Hall 12 May 201719 April 2023

The proposed formation scenario relies on unconventional processes to account for a bevy of seven Earth-sized exoplanets recently found orbiting an unlikely star.

A researcher looks over the Greenland ice cap, a “frozen ocean.”
Posted inNews

New Instrument May Aid Search for Extraterrestrial Life

JoAnna Wendel, freelance science writer and illustrator by JoAnna Wendel 10 May 201729 September 2021

For 2 weeks on the Greenland ice cap, scientists tested an instrument that might help us find life on icy moons with oceans beneath their crusts.

NSF’s global-class research vessel Sikuliaq in February 2014.
Posted inNews

With 2017 Budget Signed into Law, Eyes Turn to 2018 Battle

by Randy Showstack 9 May 201719 April 2023

Analysts hope that Congress will continue to support science programs in next year’s budget as well.

A “dead cart” depicted in an antique engraving.
Posted inNews

Plague Bug May Have Lurked in Medieval England Between Outbreaks

Bas den Hond, Science Writer by Bas den Hond 8 May 201723 March 2023

A new analysis of climate records in England and Europe’s Low Countries suggests that the disease-causing bacterium persisted in rodents between recurrences in people.

Artist’s rendition of a future NASA spacecraft visiting Jupiter’s moon Europa.
Posted inNews

Newly Signed Federal Budget Is Favorable to Science

by Randy Showstack 5 May 201719 April 2023

Budget bill signed by Trump this afternoon shows bipartisan congressional support for Earth and space sciences despite the administration’s initial goal of cutting nondefense discretionary spending.

Methane seep
Posted inNews

Ancient Methane Seeps Tell Tale of Sudden Warming

JoAnna Wendel, freelance science writer and illustrator by JoAnna Wendel 5 May 201731 July 2023

Newly discovered rock mounds left by ancient methane seeps give scientists clues that methane on ancient ocean floor was released by ancient global warming.

National Academy of Sciences president Marcia McNutt speaks at the NAS annual meeting.
Posted inNews

Academy President Warns of “Storm Clouds” on the Horizon

by Randy Showstack 3 May 201731 March 2022

McNutt says that business as usual “is not a viable option” for the academy in the near term to fulfill its mission and remain a relevant institution.

Gerald Wasserburg in front of the Lunatic I mass spectrometer with the Allende meteorite and a lunar rock on the table beside him
Posted inNews

Gerald J. Wasserburg (1927–2016)

by S. B. Jacobsen, D. A. Papanastassiou and D. J. DePaolo 3 May 201727 January 2022

A leading geochemist who became well known for creating the first high-precision mass spectrometer, called Lunatic I, that measured isotope ratios in lunar samples from the Apollo missions.

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.

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18 June 202616 June 2026
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