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AGU 2020

Carter Clinton and Fatimah Jackson smile while standing at a long table at a research lab.
Posted inNews

Podcast: Exhuming a Buried Piece of American History

by Lauren Lipuma 18 February 20206 March 2026

Scientists are using grave soil to reconstruct the lives of enslaved Africans in colonial New York.

A scientist with a headlamp stands on an ice outcrop in the Arctic night
Posted inNews

From the Arctic to the Austral, and All the News Between

by AGU 14 February 202028 September 2021

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

Smoke from several California fires is seen from the International Space Station in August of 2018.
Posted inResearch Spotlights

Wildfire Smoke Boosts Photosynthetic Efficiency

Elizabeth Thompson by Elizabeth Thompson 12 February 202022 December 2021

Wildfires can destroy large tracts of vegetation. But their smoke plumes may help crops and other plants use sunlight more efficiently.

Beach strewn with plastic and glass debris
Posted inNews

Bill Calls for Dramatically Cutting Plastic Pollution

by Randy Showstack 11 February 20204 February 2022

With just 8% of plastic waste in the United States currently being recycled, the bill aims to set up an effective plastic recycling program and limit single-use plastic.

Pinyon pines and sagebrush above the basin of Baldwin Lake in the San Bernardino Mountains
Posted inResearch Spotlights

Southern California Climate Change over 100,000 Years

Kate Wheeling, freelance science writer by Kate Wheeling 11 February 20205 June 2023

Researchers used a sediment core from a lake in California’s San Bernardino Mountains to track the effect of climate on vegetation, fire, and erosion between about 120,000 and 15,000 years ago.

Posted inNews

Cortes de Energía, PG&E y el Futuro Vacilante de la Ciencia

Jenessa Duncombe, Staff Writer by Jenessa Duncombe 10 February 202016 July 2025

Mientras los legisladores debaten sobre los apagones como una medida paliativa para resolver el problema de los incendios forestales en Estados Unidos, la ciencia pende de un hilo.

Cave formations in Furong Cave near Chongqing, China
Posted inResearch Spotlights

How to Read Atmospheric History Written in Flowstones

Elizabeth Thompson by Elizabeth Thompson 10 February 202028 January 2022

Oxygen isotope ratios in cave deposits reflect past climates, but interpreting these data is not straightforward. A new study explores what these ratios really tell us.

Sen. Tom Udall and former secretary of the interior Bruce Babbitt sit on a dais with National Geographic logos everywhere
Posted inNews

30 by 30: A Push to Protect U.S. Land and Water

by Randy Showstack 7 February 20201 March 2023

The effort to conserve at least 30% of U.S. land and ocean by 2030 is part of an international push for conservation aiming to protect biodiversity and mitigate climate change impacts.

Aerial view of buildings on a narrow spit of land
Posted inNews

Helping Alaskan Communities Facing Climate Risks

by Randy Showstack 7 February 202029 April 2022

Scientists examine how best to use science to help communities respond to rapid climate change in the Arctic.

Image of the tongue of a tidewater glacier
Posted inNews

From Glaciers in Antarctica to Emissions in England

by AGU 7 February 202010 November 2022

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

Posts pagination

Newer posts 1 … 29 30 31 32 33 … 36 Older posts
Over a dark blue-green square appear the words Special Report: The State of the Science 1 Year On.

Features from AGU Publications

Research Spotlights

As Wildfires Increase in the West, So Does Suppression Spending

10 June 202610 June 2026
Editors' Highlights

Multi-Scale Fault Roughness Encapsulated in a Friction Law

11 June 202611 June 2026
Editors' Vox

Small-Scale Indian Ocean Dynamics Underpin Marine Ecology and Climate

4 June 20263 June 2026
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