Old Articles: <Older 1211-1220 Newer> |
|
Scientific American August 2008 Keren Blankfeld Schultz |
Wildfires May Improve Forests' Ability to Sequester Carbon When saving trees means less carbon storage. |
Chemistry World July 10, 2008 Lewis Brindley |
Calls to Monitor Potent Greenhouse Gas A new study indicates that the environmental levels of nitrogen trifluoride, a powerful greenhouse gas, should be monitored. |
Scientific American July 2008 Christina Reed |
Chemical Fossils Preserved in Lava Reveal Remains of Ancient Sea Life Searching for microfossils inside igneous rocks. |
Scientific American July 2008 Peter Brown |
NASA Satellites Watch Polar Ice Shelf Break into Crushed Ice Ice is melting at the poles much faster than climate models predict. |
Popular Mechanics July 2008 Jon Luoma |
Greenhouse Graveyard: New Progress for Big Global Warming Fix Scientists admit it will be tough to capture a key greenhouse gas and bury carbon dioxide in the ground, in rock or underwater. What's even tougher for carbon sequestration: figuring out where to store it. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics June 2008 |
NASA chooses Space Micro's radiation-detection hardware for research satellite Scientists at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., needed space-qualified instruments for their Living with a Star space environments test bed experiment hardware. |
Wired June 23, 2008 Chris Mooney |
Can a Million Tons of Sulfur Dioxide Combat Climate Change? Geoengineering may be the necessary step to save our planet. |
Chemistry World June 23, 2008 Hepeng Jia |
Lake sediments reveal 7000 years of history By tracing variations in metal concentrations in lake sediments in central China, Geochemists have revealed a vivid picture of mining and metal use dating back 7000 years. |
Popular Mechanics June 19, 2008 Emily Gertz |
As Flood Waters Rise, Geeks Aim to Save Midwest With 3D Rig Digital models of possible flood outcomes might just help prevent developers from building in the most vulnerable spots around the country's biggest and most dangerous river. |
Chemistry World June 20, 2008 Richard Van Noorden |
Global industries call for carbon cuts Business leaders from more than 90 of the world's largest companies, including major chemical companies, have endorsed a policy framework for tackling climate change ahead of July's G8 summit in Japan. |
<Older 1211-1220 Newer> Return to current articles. |