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News

Floodwater over a road. A sign reads, “Welcome to New Jersey.”
Posted inNews

Ordinary Policies Achieve Extraordinary Climate Adaptation

Kimberly M. S. Cartier, News Writing and Production Intern for Eos.org by Kimberly M. S. Cartier 30 October 202430 October 2024

Consistently implementing zoning, permitting, and building regulations, all commonplace municipal tools, helped most New Jersey towns avoid floodplain development.

Gravura em cobre de Lisboa, Portugal, durante o terramoto de 1755.
Posted inNews

Sedimentos Caribenhos Rastreados até o Terremoto e Tsunami Português de 1755

Katherine Kornei, Science Writer by Katherine Kornei 29 October 202429 October 2024

Arqueólogos escavando na Martinica encontraram por acaso o primeiro depósito de tsunami do terremoto encontrado no Novo Mundo. Ao que parece, o tsunami deixou um forte rastro, pois a onda passou por cima de um rio.

Artist’s drawing of a rocky body among dust and dots of light with a bright star in the background
Posted inNews

Another Ring of Objects Might Exist in the Outer Solar System

by Jonathan O’Callaghan 29 October 202429 October 2024

A search for a new target for NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft suggests that space beyond the Kuiper Belt could be an unexpectedly crowded place.

Swirls of colored lines through the Atlantic Ocean
Posted inNews

The North Atlantic Is Getting Saltier

by Saugat Bolakhe 29 October 202429 October 2024

The Atlantic is already the saltiest of Earth’s oceans, and parts of it are getting saltier. Winds and warming may be to blame.

A close-up photo of a bee flying away from a pale purple flower
Posted inNews

Air Pollution Could Make It Harder for Bees to Navigate

by Skyler Ware 28 October 202429 October 2024

Fine particulate matter in the atmosphere reduces the degree of polarization of sunlight, which insects use to guide themselves home.

A satellite image shows the white storm clouds of a cyclone swirling off the arid coast of Libya.
Posted inNews

Torrents of Sediment-Laden Water Worsened Disastrous Libyan Floods

by Elise Cutts 25 October 202425 October 2024

Drought followed by torrential rain can unleash deadly floods in arid regions, like those that affected Libya in 2023.

Foto olhando para o fundo do mar, mostrando pedaços arredondados de lava negra sobre argila vermelha.
Posted inNews

Uma Ilha Tropical Há Muito Perdida Fica no Litoral do Brasil

by Erin Martin-Jones 25 October 202425 October 2024

Um platô vulcânico submerso no sudoeste do Atlântico foi uma ilha tropical há 45 milhões de anos.

Several human-constructed logs, which look like fibrous materials surrounded by rope netting, lie parallel to a river along a green bank. A tree lays perpendicular to the coir logs.
Posted inNews

On the Wisconsin-Iowa Border, the Mississippi River Is Eroding Sacred Indigenous Mounds

by Madeline Heim and Frank Vaisvilas 24 October 202424 October 2024

A multimillion-dollar bank stabilization project could protect historic sites dating back thousands of years.

Orange and yellow lava shoots out of a black mound.
Posted inNews

Hot Spot Lavas Around the World May Have Something in Common

by Bill Morris 23 October 202423 October 2024

A global study of lavas from volcanic hot spots suggests that contrary to accepted wisdom, Earth’s deep mantle may have the same composition throughout. Not everyone is convinced, however.

A cloudy sky and rain over Ocean Beach in San Francisco.
Posted inNews

Rainfall Makes the Ocean a Greater Carbon Sink

by Veronika Meduna 22 October 202414 November 2024

Rain has so far been ignored in calculations of the ocean’s capacity to take up carbon, but a new estimate shows it enhances the ocean sink by 5%–7%.

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21 August 202520 August 2025
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Waterworks on Tree Stems: The Wonders of Stemflow

21 August 202520 August 2025
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