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News

Posted inNews

3-D Models Put Scientists, Students in Touch with Planets

JoAnna Wendel, freelance science writer and illustrator by JoAnna Wendel 11 November 20152 May 2023

Three-dimensional printing gives planetary scientists new ways to explore distant worlds and engage students.

Posted inNews

Pluto: In the Icebox but Maybe Still Cookin'

by R. Cowen 9 November 20156 January 2023

New evidence of ice volcanoes and of middle-aged terrains on Pluto's surface suggests that the dwarf planet has remained geologically active ever since it first formed billions of years ago.

Posted inNews

New Spin on Pluto's Moons

by R. Cowen 9 November 20156 January 2023

Strangely speedy rotation rates of Pluto's tiny orbiting companions show up in a trove of images taken as the New Horizons spacecraft approached the dwarf planet last spring and early summer.

Posted inNews

How Bat Breath and Guano Can Change the Shapes of Caves

JoAnna Wendel, freelance science writer and illustrator by JoAnna Wendel 9 November 201513 October 2022

Researchers working in caves in Borneo and elsewhere are finding evidence that biological processes shape many tropical caves by slowly eating away at surrounding rock.

Posted inNews

White House Plan Focuses on Hazards from Solar Storms

by Randy Showstack 6 November 201513 October 2021

Space weather has its day in the Sun, with the administration issuing a new strategy and action plan to increase protection from damaging solar emissions.

Posted inNews

Cave-Dwelling "Slime Curtains" Cycle Nitrogen and Iron

Cody Sullivan by C. Sullivan 4 November 201512 April 2022

In a cave accessible only by daredevil divers, extraordinary microbial colonies metabolize nitrogen and iron nutrients and possibly remove pollutants from water.

Posted inNews

Researchers Track Underwater Avalanches Like Never Before

Cody Sullivan by C. Sullivan 3 November 201521 February 2023

Using beach ball–like detectors, researchers set out to determine how sediments, which could contain toxic contaminants, travel through submarine canyons to greater depths.

Posted inNews

Targets of Biggest Global Carbon Emitters Flunk Fairness Test

Cody Sullivan by C. Sullivan 30 October 20156 March 2023

Pledges so far by the United States, European Union, and China would require all other countries to emit 7 to 14 times less per capita than those three regions by 2030 to limit warming to 2°C.

Posted inNews

USGS Acting Director Receives Support at Senate Hearing

by Randy Showstack 29 October 201527 March 2023

Confirmation of Suzette Kimball as U.S. Geological Survey director might happen this time. In 2014, a Senate committee approved her nomination, but Congress adjourned before voting on confirmation.

Posted inNews

Cassini Probe Dives Through Enceladus Plume

JoAnna Wendel, freelance science writer and illustrator by JoAnna Wendel 28 October 201511 January 2022

NASA's Cassini probe takes a trip through a cosmic sprinkler to learn more about a subsurface ocean.

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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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