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News

NASA’S ICON satellite
Posted inNews

How to Launch a Satellite During a Blackout

Jenessa Duncombe, Staff Writer by Jenessa Duncombe 29 January 202012 December 2022

PG&E shut down the power to Berkeley’s Space Sciences Laboratory right before a satellite launch.

Irrigation machinery sprays water on the green vegetation of a mango farm in South Africa.
Posted inNews

Minireservoirs Could Save Farmers with Sandy Soils

Kate Wheeling, freelance science writer by Kate Wheeling 29 January 202031 October 2022

A recently revived subsurface water retention technology could conserve water and drastically increase crop yields in arid landscapes with sandy soils like sub-Saharan Africa.

Orbiter view of Acidalia Planitia
Posted inNews

How Scientists Search for Martian Methane

JoAnna Wendel, freelance science writer and illustrator by JoAnna Wendel 28 January 20202 November 2021

Finding subsurface reserves of methane on Mars could revolutionize human space travel, but it won’t be an easy hunt.

College students smile with open and closed boxes with tech equipment, labeled HELEN
Posted inNews

Students Launch Balloon-Borne Payloads into Thunderstorms

Katherine Kornei, Science Writer by Katherine Kornei 28 January 202019 January 2023

The High Energy Lightning Emission Network project hopes to detect elusive bursts of light and particles called terrestrial gamma ray flashes.

People on a beautiful Hawaiian beach
Posted inNews

Clean Water Act in the Balance?

by Randy Showstack 27 January 20207 March 2022

An important Supreme Court case could have major ramifications on the interpretation of the Clean Water Act and environmental protection.

An image of an 18-story wooden high-rise under construction in Brumunddal, Norway
Posted inNews

Wooden Buildings Could House the Carbon of the 21st Century

by J. Wosen 27 January 202031 January 2022

To keep carbon out of the atmosphere, researchers argue that we need to return to one of the world’s oldest building materials: wood.

Damaged buildings with a Puerto Rican flag in the foreground
Posted inNews

Enjambre de Terremotos Inusuales Golpean a Puerto Rico

Kimberly M. S. Cartier, News Writing and Production Intern for Eos.org by Kimberly M. S. Cartier 27 January 202016 July 2025

Puerto Rico no había visto tantos sismos fuertes en una sola secuencia desde que comenzó el monitoreo sísmico hace 46 años. El último terremoto que dañó la isla gravemente ocurrió en 1918.

A man uses a tool to extract a tiny sample of a construction timber in a wooden roof.
Posted inNews

Podcast: Discovering Europe’s History Through Its Timbers

Nanci Bompey, assistant director of AGU’s media relations department by N. Bompey 27 January 20206 March 2026

An analysis of timber used to construct buildings in Europe hundreds of years ago is giving scientists and historians new insights into the region’s history from the 13th to 17th centuries.

Aerial image of a rocky outcrop in the Australian Outback
Posted inNews

Asteroids, Greta Thunberg, and Other Things That Make an Impact

by AGU 24 January 202024 January 2020

What Earth and space science stories are we recommending this week?

Installation of the Doomsday Clock at 100 seconds to midnight
Posted inNews

Doomsday Clock Ticks Closer to Midnight

by Randy Showstack 23 January 20207 January 2022

The dual threats of nuclear warfare and climate change move the needle to 100 seconds to midnight.

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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20 April 202620 April 2026
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