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ENGAGE

A smoking clearing after a forest fire in Brazil.
Posted inResearch Spotlights

Amazon Deforestation and Fires are a Hazard to Public Health

Elizabeth Thompson by Elizabeth Thompson 27 August 202130 March 2023

Deforestation in the Amazon has dropped since the early 2000s, but it is slowly climbing again. A new study shows the impact of that climb on public health—and how much worse conditions could be.

In the foreground, a pregnant woman wearing a multicolored dress stands near a street, holding her belly. Her face is not visible. In the background, a white car drives by.
Posted inNews

How Can Wristbands Monitor Pollution, PAHs, and Prenatal Care?

by Alka Tripathy-Lang 27 August 202130 March 2023

Silicone wristbands can help monitor pregnant women’s exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. Tracking these toxic chemicals, produced by combustion, could improve public health outcomes.

Jane, an anthropomorphized zircon crystal, complete with a face, arms, and legs, experiences stages of development in a magma chamber.
Posted inGeoFIZZ

Meet Jane, the Zircon Grain—Geochronology’s New Mascot

by Alka Tripathy-Lang 27 August 202130 March 2023

In a children’s book written by geochronologist Matthew Fox, he condenses 400 million years of history into 34 playfully poetic pages as he follows the travels of a single grain of sand.

Three college students in face masks talk in a classroom.
Posted inNews

New View of Expanding Perspectives in the Geosciences

by Humberto Basilio 26 August 202110 April 2023

Earth and environmental sciences have some of the least diverse racial and ethnic representation in academia. To face profound future challenges, the fields need to address the inequities of the past and how they inform the present.

Kichwa forest monitors in a deforested site at Copal Urco in the Peruvian Amazon.
Posted inNews

Indigenous Peoples Harness Space Technology to Stop Deforestation

by Andrew J. Wight 26 August 202130 March 2023

Satellite observations have long been used to detect deforestation, and a new study shows that giving Indigenous groups greater access to these data can improve response times and reduce tree cover loss.

Elk wade in the East Fork of Bitterroot River in Montana during a wildfire in August 2000.
Posted inNews

Climate Change and Extreme Weather Linked in U.N. Climate Report

Jenessa Duncombe, Staff Writer by Jenessa Duncombe 25 August 202130 March 2023

A major scientific assessment of global climate science found a much stronger connection between climate change and extreme weather than ever before.

Photo of two corn hybrid species growing in a field. The adult hybrid plants at left are green, whereas the hybrid plants at right are yellow and dried.
Posted inNews

Index Suggests That Half of Nitrogen Applied to Crops Is Lost

Jenessa Duncombe, Staff Writer by Jenessa Duncombe 23 August 202130 March 2023

Food production is becoming less efficient at using nitrogen fertilizer, according to a review of global values. Excess nitrogen damages the environment and the climate.

Roadside ditches can remove nitrogen from water before it gets to waterways.
Posted inResearch Spotlights

Roadside Ditches Are Effective at Nitrogen Removal

Sarah Derouin, Science Writer by Sarah Derouin 4 August 202130 March 2023

Researchers compared the nitrogen removal potential by microbes in ditches that drained forested, urban, and agricultural lands and discovered that roadside ditches are important areas for removing nutrients.

Pictograms show examples of earthquake, tsunami, drought, and flood.
Posted inGeoFIZZ

Geomojis Translate Geoscience Across Any Language

Megan Sever, Science Writer by Megan Sever 20 April 202117 April 2023

Newly created pictograms aim to easily communicate geoscience and geohazard terms.

电动汽车在柏林的一个加油站充电
Posted inResearch Spotlights

如果没有个人行动,单靠碳捕获无法解决气候问题

Joshua Learn, Science Writer by Joshua Rapp Learn 12 March 202130 March 2023

像使用电动汽车这样的个人选择将在很大程度上影响巴黎协定气候目标的实现。

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