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Geotimes
November 2006
Megan Sever
Conveyor Belt Shutdown Not Imminent As the climate warms and ice on Greenland melts, freshwater pours into the North Atlantic, which new research suggests is unlikely to cause a shutdown in global ocean circulation. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
November 2005
Kathryn Hansen
Salting a Stagnant Ocean In its Third Assessment Report, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change flagged the potential sudden collapse of the thermohaline circulation in the Atlantic, which warms Europe to its current habitable climate, as a significant source of concern. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
November 2006
Margaret Putney
Ice Reveals Polar Temperature Seesaw A new ice core from Antarctica directly correlates abrupt changes in Greenland's climate over the last 150,000 years with counterpart changes in Antarctica -- offering further indication that the two icy regions are connected by ocean currents in a sort of bipolar seesaw. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
January 2004
Naomi Lubick
Saltier sea Oceanographers have documented the growing saltiness of the Atlantic in the tropics, in opposition to freshening of the polar oceans. The changes in the sea-surface salinity indicate changes in the hydrologic cycle, the researchers say, which may be attributable to human-induced climate changes. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
October 2007
Moran & Backman
The Arctic Ocean: So Much We Still Don't Know In 2004, the Arctic Coring Expedition team took three ships to the Arctic to drill a core near the Lomonosov Ridge. The team's results are teaching us more than we ever knew about the past 65 million years in the Arctic. mark for My Articles similar articles
Popular Mechanics
July 1, 2009
Andrew Moseman
5 Climate Studies That Don't Live Up to Their Hype A leading climate scientist argues that overbroad claims by some researchers -- coupled with overblown reporting in the media -- can undermine the public's understanding of climate issues. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
October 2004
Naomi Lubick
Extinction Realities Baffling Flash-Frozen Science A highly exaggerated storm surge floods New York City in "The Day After Tomorrow," a movie that while entertaining, bends several laws of physics in its dramatization of sudden climate change. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
May 2003
Greg Peterson
A new trigger for Ice Age retreat About 14,600 years ago, a huge pulse of freshwater drained from continental ice sheets into the world's oceans. Now scientists have a new theory for where it came from. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
August 2006
Megan Sever
From Hot to Cold in the Arctic For the first time, scientists have recovered direct evidence of what life in the Arctic has been like for the past 56 million years. A new 400-meter-long sediment core is revealing that all in the Arctic has not always been as it seems. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
May 2005
Naomi Lubick
Heat Imbalance Portends Problems Results from a new assessment show that Earth is absorbing more energy than it releases into space, with implications for climate change that researchers say point to future warming with consequences for melting ice sheets and sea-level rise. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
January 2007
Margaret Putney
Ice Reveals Polar Temperature Seesaw A new ice core from Antarctica directly correlates abrupt changes in Greenland's climate over the last 150,000 years with counterpart changes in Antarctica -- offering further indication that the two icy regions are connected by ocean currents in a sort of bipolar seesaw. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
July 2007
Kathryn Hansen
Ancient Ocean Burps A sediment core extracted from the ocean floor off the coast of Baja, Calif., indicates two "burps" of carbon dioxide were once released from a deep, stagnant part of the ocean. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
December 2006
Top Climate News Stories of 2006 A new public face for climate change... Strong debate over storms... Thawing ice shifts water cycles... Methane climate menagerie... etc. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
February 2007
Carolyn Gramling
Past El Ninos Portend Future Climates A new study examining evidence of long-term variability at El Nino's source suggests the strength of the phenomenon is highly sensitive to even small changes in climate. That sensitivity could have implications for how it plays into future climate change. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
November 2003
Sara Pratt
Stuck between a rock and a cold place A stalagmite mined from an island cave in the Indian Ocean suggests that the ages currently assigned to the gold standard of ancient climate records -- the Greenland ice cores -- need revision for the period between 55,000 and 42,000 years ago. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
January 2005
Megan Sever
Stalagmite Shows Connected Climate Clues from inside caves in Costa Rica and Panama are helping scientists develop temperature and rainfall records for the last 20,000 years mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
December 2005
Kevin E. Trenberth
A Warming World Climate change is with us; we cannot stop it, although we can slow it down. It behooves us therefore to track how and why the climate is changing. mark for My Articles similar articles
Popular Mechanics
October 1, 2008
Andrew Moseman
Newest Arctic Melt Record Leaves Scientists Scratching Heads There's good news and bad news when it comes to the amount of ice in the Arctic. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
March 2006
Powell et al.
Drilling Back to the Future Antarctica plays a fundamental role in sea-level change and ocean chemistry, and has the potential for important societal impacts over human timescales. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
April 2007
Carolyn Gramling
Wallace Broecker: Changes in the Atmosphere An interview with an expert on issues of climate change about his experiences advising politicians about the consequences of climate change and his hopes for new technologies of carbon sequestration. mark for My Articles similar articles
Scientific American
September 2008
Lucas Laursen
Seismic "Noise"--Oil Prospecting Data Could Decipher Ocean Mixing A ring of warm, salty water in the Atlantic was recently imaged with seismic survey data taken 15 years ago mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
November 2004
Naomi Lubick
Past warming for the future As the Bush administration prepares for a second term, only time will tell how its climate change policy will change in the next four years. In the meantime, discussions of the science behind climate changes abound in the journals and within the scientific community. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
September 27, 2007
Simon Hadlington
Scientists Uncover How Last Ice Age Ended Scientists have shown that the end of the last age 19,000 years ago began in the higher latitudes of the southern hemisphere before sweeping into the tropics. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
April 2007
Sally Adee
Massive Antarctic Lakes Discovered The recent discovery of a massive "plumbing" system of linked reservoirs 1,000 meters beneath two major ice streams of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet may help fill out climate change models. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
May 2004
Sara Pratt
Ice in the Greenhouse? The greenhouse world of the Late Cretaceous, long thought to be ice-free, may have been chillier than previously predicted. mark for My Articles similar articles
Popular Mechanics
August 21, 2008
Emily Gertz
Desert Storm Watch: Scientists Observe Saharan Dust to Predict the Next Big Hurricane Season A University of Wisconsin researcher and his team have connected the dry, windswept plains of the Sahara to the intensity of the Atlantic hurricane season. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
February 2005
Naomi Lubick
Virtual Climate Experiment's Results A worldwide global climate experiment that ran on tens of thousands of personal computers across the planet offered the most extreme scenario yet for global warming. mark for My Articles similar articles
Popular Mechanics
August 12, 2008
Laurie J. Schmidt
Sensor-Laden Super Seals Dive Deep for New Global Warming Data A behemoth marine mammal whose diving skills would put an Olympic athlete to shame has become a surprise player in climate-change studies mark for My Articles similar articles
Reason
October 2005
Sallie Baliunas
Full of Hot Air Book review: A climate alarmist takes on "criminals against humanity" in Boiling Point: How Politicians, Big Oil and Coal, Journalists and Activists Are Fueling the Climate Crisis -- And What We Can Do to Avert the Disaster, by Ross Gelbspan. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
August 2004
Naomi Lubick
Doubling the Ice Record A team of European researchers released their first round of results from the longest ice core ever to be recovered from a polar glacier. Measurements show some interesting temperature shifts that may cause climatologists to reevaluate their models. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
January 23, 2013
Chemical climate proxies With the climate change debate as heated as ever, how do scientists reconstruct what the weather was like in the past? Jon Evans looks at the detective chemistry behind such environmental forensic work mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
October 2006
Geocatastrophes Catastrophe and Opportunity in an Ancient Hot-House Climate... When the Mediterranean Dried Up: Forensics of a Geocatastrophe... The Great Death: Redefining a Mass Extinction... mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
February 2013
Dave Levitan
Laser Eyes Spy a Big Melt in the Arctic Airborne altimeters yield a disturbing picture of polar ice loss mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
February 2007
Nicole Branan
Shifting Winds Shift Warming Trends? New model simulations indicate that a poleward shift in the Southern Hemisphere westerly winds could cause the Southern Ocean's carbon dioxide and heat uptake to increase by up to 20%. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
June 2006
Erika Engelhaupt
Warming Opened Americas to Humans About 18,000 years ago the comparatively luxuriant Americas beckoned to hunter-gatherers in eastern Asia by way of present-day Alaska, with warmer climes and plenty of fish and game, say geoarchaeologists. mark for My Articles similar articles
Outside
October 2002
Ian Frazier
Terminal Ice Hot enough for you? Go to the bottom of the planet -- or the top -- and you can't miss the warning signs of a warm apocalypse. And at the heart of the mystery, like broken shards of a colder climate, float the icebergs, ghost-white messengers trying to tell us something we can't fathom. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
April 2005
Geomedia Arctic Climate Change in Photos... Book review: Frozen Earth: The Once and Future Story of Ice Ages by Doug Macdougall... Mapping Sinkhole Risk in Maryland... mark for My Articles similar articles
Science News
February 14, 2009
Lonnie Thompson
Receding Glaciers Erase Records Of Climate History Ice masses on the tops of mountains -- sticking out in the free atmosphere -- have been collecting climate data and storing them, in many cases for very long periods. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
November 2007
Nicole Branan
Water Pours Through Pores in Sea Ice Scientists have come up with a new model that describes how water moves through the Arctic sea ice beneath melt ponds, helping them to make better climate predictions. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
December 2003
Megan Sever
A year of global ice observations Scientists are now getting the most accurate view ever of changes in the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets. The new maps, using NASA's Ice, Cloud and Land Elevation Satellite, are shedding light on the processes controlling these ice masses, which comprise 75 percent of Earth's freshwater. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
September 2006
Lee Gerhard
Testing Global Warming Hypotheses Global climate change has been a natural phenomenon driven by natural processes for 4.5 billion years. Nevertheless, cultural pressures exist to identify a human cause for current global climate change. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
April 2004
Tim Palucka
A Climate of Your Own The largest climate modeling experiment ever devised is running on borrowed time, literally. The model is taking computing time on loan from more than 47,000 personal computers worldwide, with the full knowledge and consent of their owners. mark for My Articles similar articles
Popular Mechanics
June 12, 2009
Jerry Beilinson
Climate Change Solutions: Live From World Science Festival 2009 The roundtable session, called "Carbon Conundrum," took place in front of an audience of about 150 on day two of the World Science Festival. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
April 2007
Katherine Unger
Two Continents, One Conclusion A sharp change in climate tens of millions of years ago was global, not regional as previously thought, according to two new studies. That could have implications for global climate change in the modern world, researchers say. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
March 2006
Naomi Lubick
Ice Hunter: Q&A With Lonnie Thompson An interview with glaciologist and Byrd Polar Research Center scientist Lonnie Thompson about what it mean to hunt ice and about some his current work. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
November 2005
Sara Pratt
Middens Mark Southwest Cold Snap A study of ancient rodent trash piles in Grand Canyon caves has confirmed that the American Southwest experienced the climatic period known as the Younger Dryas -- a cold snap lasting from 12,900 to 11,600 years ago. mark for My Articles similar articles
Wired
September 22, 2008
Damon Tabor
Scientists May Soon Outnumber Penguins at Earth's Poles Tens of thousands of scientists are zipping up their parkas for the latest International Polar Year initiative. mark for My Articles similar articles
Scientific American
April 2007
David Biello
Conservative Climate The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's consensus document may understate the climate change problem. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
November 27, 2006
Adam Aston
Wild Fixes For A Warming Planet Scientists are envisioning giant but risky engineering projects to undo climate change. mark for My Articles similar articles