Old Articles: <Older 1241-1250 Newer> |
|
Chemistry World September 16, 2008 Rebecca Trager |
US Disease Agency Criticised for Great Lakes Pollution Study The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is re-evaluating pollution data on the Great Lakes of eastern North America after criticism from an independent panel. |
Scientific American October 2008 Barbara Juncosa |
Climate Change May be Sparking New and Bigger "Dead Zones" Climate change seems to be starving some waters of oxygen. |
Scientific American September 2008 Krista West |
Researchers hone seismic skills to peer inside glaciers Seismic data enable scientists to peer inside melting glaciers before they calve |
Scientific American September 2008 Michael Tennesen |
Gauging Biodiversity by Listening to Forest Sounds Noise from human activity threatens an animal's reproductive success |
Chemistry World September 2008 Maria Burke |
Something in the water Drugs have been finding their way into our water supplies for as long as they have been in use, so should we worry? |
Chemistry World September 2008 Victoria Gill |
Editorial: Liquid asset Many predict that the major conflicts of the coming century will be fought over water. And the unpredictable impacts of climate change mean that we cannot simply rely on surface water resources to continue to be replenished by rain. |
Chemistry World September 2008 Elizabeth Milson |
Sustainable water Water treated to an appropriate standard is required not only for drinking but also to satisfy all our domestic, industrial and agricultural needs. |
Chemistry World September 2008 Dylan Stiles |
Column: Bench Monkey Decades of constant oceanic currents have resulted in a huge area of the Pacific that has become a veritable black hole of human-produced waste. |
Chemistry World August 29, 2008 Hepeng Jia |
Drinking water safe after China plant blast The most serious chemical factory explosion to occur China for over a decade has not caused major damage to the environment, according to local authorities. |
Chemistry World August 29, 2008 Fred Campbell |
Breaking the bonds of global warming US scientists have managed to prise apart the highly unreactive carbon-fluorine bond at room temperature, potentially paving the way to the efficient disposal of hydrofluorocarbons -- highly stable and long-lived greenhouse gases. |
<Older 1241-1250 Newer> Return to current articles. |