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2021 CC BY-NC-ND

A pink laser sublimates an ice core in a scientific instrument chamber.
Posted inNews

The Catcher in the Ice

Bas den Hond, Science Writer by Bas den Hond 22 January 20212 September 2022

There are three ways to extract gases from an ice core. The cleanest one, sublimation, is getting easier.

A research vessel in the Arctic at sunset
Posted inNews

The Influence of Tidal Forces Extends to the Arctic’s Deep Sea

by Jackie Rocheleau 21 January 202119 October 2021

The Moon’s gravitational pull creates the tides, but its influence extends hundreds of meters below the sea surface too, influencing sensitive methane seeps in the seabed.

Satellite image of the Bering Strait
Posted inNews

Overturning in the Pacific May Have Enabled a “Standstill” in Beringia

Bas den Hond, Science Writer by Bas den Hond 21 January 20212 September 2022

During the last glacial period, a vanished ocean current may have made the land bridge between Asia and the Americas into a place where humans could wait out the ice.

Abstract illustration of people standing or sitting on top of a laptop keyboard and participating in remote education
Posted inOpinions

Graduate Student Perspectives on Equitable Remote Learning

by E. Bhatt, M. G. Blevins, D. H. Freeman and L. Taenzer 21 January 202110 March 2023

Remote learning can be a catalyst for instructors and institutions to invest in teaching practices that reinforce growth mindsets and that help students share responsibility for learning outcomes.

Map showing sea surface salinity response to Hurricane Irma in 2017
Posted inEditors' Highlights

Hurricanes Wakes Show Asymmetrical Response in Ocean Salinity

by J. Sprintall 21 January 20211 February 2023

It’s well known that hurricanes can substantially impact ocean surface temperature, but a new study shows they can also induce an ocean salinity response in unexpected ways.

Multiethnic group of people standing in a row and wearing masks at a polling station on Election Day
Posted inGeoFIZZ

Scientists Are Primed for Poll Positions

by K. McCarthy 19 January 202127 February 2023

Scientists and science communicators can lend their expertise to a growing shortage of poll workers in the United States.

Illustration of a lot of debris orbiting Earth
Posted inOpinions

Charting Satellite Courses in a Crowded Thermosphere

by S. Bruinsma, M. Fedrizzi, J. Yue, C. Siemes and S. Lemmens 19 January 20213 November 2021

As the number of satellites in low Earth orbit grows by leaps and bounds, accurate calculations of the effects of atmospheric drag on their trajectories are becoming critically important.

A researcher checks a GPS ground motion sensor amid the rocky, barren landscape of the Altiplano-Puna Plateau in the southern Bolivian Andes
Posted inScience Updates

Using Earthquake Forensics to Study Subduction from Space

by S. Schneider and J. R. Weiss 19 January 202118 January 2022

Researchers combined satellite geodetic measurements of surface motion with a new geophysical data inversion method to probe the Chilean subduction zone in the wake of the 2010 Maule earthquake.

Interseismic and coseismic slip models of the Philippine Fault on Leyte island
Posted inEditors' Highlights

A New Picture of Seismogenesis on the Philippine Fault

by Isabelle Manighetti 19 January 20216 October 2021

Long-time series of satellite observation reveal that the creeping segment of the Philippine Fault is also capable of producing strong earthquakes, and show where these earthquakes might occur.

Scientists excavate the remains of a Taíno house at Los Buchillones, Cuba.
Posted inNews

Taíno Stilt Houses May Have Been an Adaptation to Climate Change

Lakshmi Supriya, Science Writer by L. Supriya 15 January 202126 October 2022

A coastal village in the Caribbean flourished during a period of increased hurricanes. Research suggests the Taíno designed their dwellings to persist through the greater storm surges.

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Seasonal Iron Cycle and Production in the Subantarctic Southern Ocean

29 May 202529 May 2025
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Keeping Soil Healthy: Why It Matters and How Science Can Help

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