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News

A Eurasian reed warbler carrying an insect in its beak
Posted inNews

Magnetic Stop Signs Show Birds the Way Home

Jenessa Duncombe, Staff Writer by Jenessa Duncombe 14 February 202214 February 2022

Just like salmon and sea turtles, these songbirds appear to be sensitive to shifts in the magnetic field.

The coast of Santa Maria Island in the Azores
Posted inNews

How Does Sand Move? New Observations Challenge Prevailing Formulas

by Andrew Chapman 11 February 202211 February 2022

Research in the Azores finds a discrepancy between field observations of sediment transport and predictions made with commonly used mathematical formulas.

Satellite image of the Himalayas
Posted inNews

Himalayas Are Experiencing an “Exceptional” Loss of Glacial Mass

Rishika Pardikar, Science Writer by Rishika Pardikar 10 February 202220 July 2022

The Himalayas have lost 40% of their glacial mass since the Little Ice Age. East Nepal and Bhutan have experienced the most rapid losses.

A rocky planet and a smaller rocky moon sit on a black background with dark red streaks. The planet in the foreground has a cratered surface and has patches of red, green, gray, and blue rocks. The smaller grayish brown rocky moon in the background is between 10 and 11 o’clock relative to the planet.
Posted inNews

To Make a Big Moon, Start with a Small Planet

Kimberly M. S. Cartier, News Writing and Production Intern for Eos.org by Kimberly M. S. Cartier 10 February 202210 February 2022

Why is our Moon so massive compared with Earth, and how might that configuration happen elsewhere?

Sand dunes flank a freshwater lake.
Posted inNews

Estimating Lake Evaporation Just Got Easier

by Issa Sikiti da Silva 9 February 202211 February 2022

A new method standardizes freshwater lake measurements and shows they are losing a fifth of their inflow to evaporation.

Yatteyattah Nature Reserve in Australia
Posted inNews

A New Model for an Old Extinction Event

by Robin Donovan 8 February 20228 February 2022

A 3D Earth system model incorporates variables such as temperature and sulfurization to shed light on the end-Permian extinction event.

Chicago, Ill., along the shore of Lake Michigan
Posted inNews

Lake Michigan’s Salinity Is on the Rise

by Robin Donovan 7 February 202227 March 2023

Road salt is primarily to blame for the shift, though the water remains within safe levels for now.

Increased rainfall and floods threaten the urban landscape of Abidjan, Ivory Coast.
Posted inNews

Deforestation Is Flooding West African Coasts

by Humberto Basilio 7 February 202227 March 2023

The lack of trees is contributing to increased rainfall along the coast of southwest Africa, where communities are already vulnerable to flash flooding.

Artist’s rendering of a planet covered in magma
Posted inNews

Layered Zone Beneath Coral Sea Suggests Ancient Magma Ocean

by Alka Tripathy-Lang 4 February 202225 May 2022

Scientists studying South Pacific earthquakes suggest that an ultralow-velocity zone at the core-mantle boundary may be a remnant of a molten early Earth.

A wide and flat rock sample with a gray exterior sits on a lighter gray background. Green crystals inside the rock are exposed on the side of the rock facing forward. The crystals are small and uniform in size and light green to dark green in shade.
Posted inNews

Good News: Rocks Crack Under Pressure from Mineral CO2 Storage

Kimberly M. S. Cartier, News Writing and Production Intern for Eos.org by Kimberly M. S. Cartier 3 February 20221 June 2023

When carbon mineralizes in stone, each new fracture exposes more surfaces that can react with and trap CO2, enhancing a rock’s storage capacity.

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