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This climate scientist has tried really hard to get a date | Howard Lee
A date for disaster: the end-Permian mass extinction event.
Seth Burgess has, literally, travelled to the ends of the Earth to find a date. Along the way he has endured attacks of giant flesh-eating bee-flies, paddled a raft 60 miles in driving Siberian rain, braved volcanoes in Alaska, and inhaled polluted air in China for weeks on end, all the while hauling pounds of rocks. And all in the name of Science.
The date he seeks plays extremely hard to get.
Continue reading...The world's most polluted cities
This month’s data set graphic by Pete Guest looks at the deaths attributable to air pollution as well as WHO guidelines
Continue reading...Six-year-old girl dies after bite from brown snake in northern NSW
Girl was bitten at property near Walgett on 5 February, taken to local hospital then airlifted to Sydney Children’s hospital before her condition deteriorated
A six-year-old girl has died after being bitten by a brown snake on a property in outback New South Wales.
The girl was bitten at a property near Walgett, in the state’s north, on the afternoon of 5 February and was transferred to the local hospital to receive anti-venom.
Continue reading...‘Phony peach’: the disease that threatens to devastate Britain’s trees and plants
Xylella fastidiosa has wreaked havoc in the US and Europe and could dwarf the impact of ash dieback in the UK
It has caused severe damage to plants and trees in the US and southern Europe and now there are fears it is heading this way. With experts warning that it could make the devastating ash dieback disease seem like “a walk in the park”, the UK is on red alert for signs that Xylella fastidiosa has entered the country.
First confirmed in Europe three years ago when it ran rampant across olive plantations in southern Italy, a subspecies of Xylella has since been detected in southern France, where it has destroyed vines and lavender plants, and in Corsica. Xylella fastidiosa has also been found in both South and North America where it is commonly referred to as “phony peach disease” and where it has caused severe damage to citrus and coffee plantations. In New Jersey it has attacked more than a third of the state’s urban trees.
Continue reading...Neanderthal DNA linked to depression and other health conditions in humans
Wasps fly backwards to make sure they can find home
Einstein's gravitational waves directly observed for first time
China overtakes EU to become global wind power leader
Booming market grew 27% in 2015 edging past European Union for first time, says industry group. Climate Home reports
China installed half of all new wind capacity worldwide last year, according to the Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC).
The country added an “astonishing” 30.5 gigawatts (GW) to boost installations to 145.1GW, the Brussels-based industry group said on Wednesday.
Continue reading...Einstein's gravitational waves explained
Fear of vengeful omniscient gods may have helped societies expand
Number of bushfires in Australia 'increased by 40pc' over five years
Hundreds of galaxies discovered hidden behind the Milky Way
Female bamboo shark is due for 'virgin birth' at Sea Life centre
Female shark that has had no contact with males for more than two years produces two fertile eggs
A female shark that has had no contact with males of its species for more than two years is due to give birth to two babies. The white-spotted bamboo shark arrived at Great Yarmouth Sea Life Centre in 2013, having been evacuated from the badly flooded sister centre in Hunstanton, also in Norfolk.
She has been the only member of her species at the centre in that time and has had no contact with male sharks. But experts at the centre have revealed that she has produced two fertile eggs, which are due to hatch in nine months’ time.
Continue reading...Traffic button pushes beautiful design
Shark attacks hit record high in 2015, global tally shows
International Shark Attack File notes 98 unprovoked shark attacks – including six fatalities – with US, Australia and South Africa witnessing highest numbers
Sharks attacked people 98 times in 2015, a spike in unprovoked attacks that set a new record as human populations rise, researchers found in an annual global tally released on Monday.
Related: Shark nets used at most beaches do not protect swimmers, research suggests
Continue reading...Trouble in paradise: Lord Howe Island divided over plan to exterminate rats
Rodents are threatening the unique natural environment of Australia’s sparsely populated Lord Howe Island. But a plan to eradicate the pests by dropping 42 tonnes of poisoned cereal is splitting the close-knit community in half
Described by the UN as “an area of spectacular and scenic landscapes”, Lord Howe Island is nothing if not dramatic. Formed from an inferno of underwater volcanoes more than six million years ago, the 10km long crescent-shaped island sits in a bath of turquoise water, exactly where the warm East Australian Current meets the icy waters of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current.
Those ancient lava flows left a rugged landscape with steep cliffs, which drop off into an ocean which supports the world’s most southerly coral reef. Between those cliffs and the reef lies a calm blue lagoon that laps against a yellow-sand beach.
Continue reading...Cockroach-inspired robot could help save disaster victims
No climate conspiracy: NOAA temperature adjustments bring data closer to pristine | Dana Nuccitelli
A new study finds that NOAA temperature adjustments are doing exactly what they’re supposed to
Congressman Lamar Smith (R-TX) has embarked upon a witch-hunt against climate scientists at NOAA, accusing them of conspiring to fudge global temperature data. However, a new study has found that the adjustments NOAA makes to the raw temperature data bring them closer to measurements from a reference network of pristinely-located temperature stations.
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