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Europe

A series of petroglyphs of animal, human, and plant images on a cliff wall
Posted inNews

European Contact with the Americas May Have Triggered Global Cooling

Mary Caperton Morton, Science Writer by Mary Caperton Morton 8 April 20199 September 2024

The loss of precontact agricultural communities to genocide and disease may have led to massive reforestation, a dip in carbon dioxide, and one of the coldest snaps of the Little Ice Age.

Aletsch Glacier in Switzerland
Posted inResearch Spotlights

How Monsoons in Africa Drove Glacier Growth in Europe

by E. Underwood 14 December 20181 February 2022

A new study shows that low-latitude weather can affect distant glaciers.

Skiers in Sölden, Austria.
Posted inResearch Spotlights

The Benefits and Vulnerabilities of a Warming Europe

Alexandra Branscombe by A. Branscombe 10 April 201813 February 2023

Scientists evaluate the economic and environmental impacts of a warmer climate on European countries, finding a range of effects on tourism, electricity demand, and ecosystem production.

A bucket lies on dry a well in the middle of a farmland in Italy’s Delta Po region
Posted inNews

Southern Europe’s Groundwater Use Will Become Unsustainable

by R. Skibba 13 December 20179 May 2022

Even places without groundwater problems now will face water shortages by the 2040s if climate change continues on its current trajectory.

Posted inEditors' Vox

The Challenges Posed by Induced Seismicity

by F. Grigoli and S. Wiemer 9 June 20178 December 2022

A recent paper in Reviews of Geophysics examined the increasing incidence of seismic events caused by industrial activities.

New measurements help researchers assess methane emitted by wetlands
Posted inResearch Spotlights

What’s the Average Methane Isotope Signature in Arctic Wetlands?

by Terri Cook 4 May 20173 March 2023

Aircraft measurements confirm that methane emissions from northern European wetlands exhibit a uniform regional carbon isotopic signature, despite considerable ground-level heterogeneity.

German-Alpine-Molasse-Basin-shaped-by-faults
Posted inResearch Spotlights

Characterizing the Faults Beneath Germany

Shannon Hall by S. Hall 16 August 20166 December 2021

A team of researchers has described how the faults within the German Alpine Molasse Basin initially developed.

Pannonian-Basin-Miocene-extension-greater-than-previously-thought
Posted inResearch Spotlights

Unraveling the History of Central Europe's Pannonian Basin

by Terri Cook 12 August 201622 August 2023

A multidisciplinary model linking the sedimentary and tectonic histories of this structurally complex basin suggests that large amounts of extension occurred there between 20 and 9 million years ago.

piazza-duomo-cathedral-acireale-basilica-saints
Posted inScience Updates

Tiny Accelerometers Create Europe's First Urban Seismic Network

by A. D’Alessandro 17 March 20166 June 2022

The system, under development in Acireale, Italy, could be used to monitor earthquakes in real time and help rescue workers focus efforts where they’re needed most.

Posted inResearch Spotlights

Uncertainty Evaluations Improve Biogeochemical Simulations

by Terri Cook 15 March 201627 September 2022

Results from the first decade-long reanalysis simulation of northwest European shelf biogeochemistry show the importance of quantifying the uncertainty in these indicators to inform marine policy.

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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

Pre-Existing Structure and Stress Shape Geothermal-Induced Seismicity

2 June 20261 June 2026
Editors' Vox

Small-Scale Indian Ocean Dynamics Underpin Marine Ecology and Climate

4 June 20263 June 2026
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