Month: September 2013

  • The Naked Mole Rat’s Secret to a Long and Healthy Life

    Naked mole rats live approximately 30 years, which doesn’t seem too big of a feat to humans, but compared to the rest of the animal kingdom, this is an exceptionally long time. What’s also impressive is that these mole rats pretty much stay healthy until the end of their lives. Reports even say that this…

  • Crossing the Northwest Passage: Cargo Ship Navigates Arctic Route

    The Northwest Passage is a 900-mile long sea route through the Arctic Ocean that connects the Atlantic and Pacific Ocean. Access through this passage would allow many short cuts and benefits for the shipping industry. However, it’s frozen waters and dangerous ice caps have proven to be obstacles for transport. That is, until now. This…

  • Climate change pushing tropical trees upslope ‘exactly as predicted’

    Tropical tree communities are moving up mountainsides to cooler habitats as temperatures rise, a new study in Global Change Biology has found. By examining the tree species present in ten one-hectare plots at various intervals over a decade, researchers found that the proportion of lowland species increased in the plots at higher elevations.

  • Extreme wildfires – the new normal?

    It has been a deadly year for the people who fight wildfires. In total, 32 people have lost their lives fighting fires in 2013; the highest number in nearly 20 years, according to the National Interagency Fire Center. Just one incident accounts for most of those deaths, the Yarnell Hill fire in Arizona. In June,…

  • New UN climate change report

    The United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has been leading the effort in collecting scientific evidence of climate change and in looking to answer the most important question, is it caused by human activity? Some argue that it is caused mostly by natural variability, and non-human factors. The new IPCC report, released this…

  • Borneo Tribesmen Block Road as Controversial Rainforest Dam Impoundment Begins

    Indigenous leaders have set up roadblocks in Malaysian Borneo to protest Sarawak’s newest dam, report environmental activists who oppose the project.

  • Air pollution danger areas mapped by NASA

    Air pollution is a global problem, but it is not evenly distributed. Some areas are worse than others, of course. And air pollution can cause premature death from the diseases it can cause. Earth scientists studying air pollution have just released a map that shows air pollution deaths over time on a global scale. The…

  • An Account of the Climate as Told by the Trees

    Researchers at the GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences in Potsdam, Germany are reconstructing temperature data from trees in Turkey to better define and understand the climactic conditions. Researchers have confidently chronicled a block of time that reflects the medieval warm period including a little ice age between the 16th and 19th centuries up to…

  • Our daily bread

    Put yourself in Novak Djokovic’s tennis shoes. It’s 2009. You have been playing tennis passionately since the age of 4, even beneath a sky peppered with F-117 bombers in war-torn Serbia. It is your dream to win Grand Slam tournaments and be the best. But no matter how hard you train, your body betrays you.…

  • Could payphones be converted to EV charging stations?

    In an intriguing development across New York City there is speculation that the authorities may soon look at converting existing payphones into electric car charging stations. On the surface this may look like yet another crazy idea connected with the electric vehicle industry but if you take a step back, consider the options, it may…