Author Archive

Unusual Metallic Filament Detected on Sun

Written by spaceweather.com

 

NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory is monitoring an unusual filament of magnetism on the sun. This image, taken on Nov. 22nd, shows where magnetic forces are holding a massive curl of dense plasma just above the stellar surface (photo above)

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Study: No decline in snow cover in Tibet since 2000

Written by Xiaoyue Wang et al., Nature

No widespread decline in Tibetan snow cover since 2000. Understanding the changes in snow cover is essential for biological and hydrological processes in the Tibetan Plateau (TP) and its surrounding areas. However, the changes in snow cover phenology over the TP have not been well documented.

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How a ‘shadow zone’ traps the world’s oldest ocean water

Written by www.terradaily.com

New research from an international team has revealed why the oldest water in the ocean in the North Pacific has remained trapped in a shadow zone around 2km below the sea surface for over 1000 years.

To put it in context, the last time this water encountered the atmosphere the Goths had just invaded the Western Roman Empire.

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Climate Change Boosts Urban Tree Growth in Cities Worldwide

Written by www.nature.com

Abstract: Despite the importance of urban trees, their growth reaction to climate change and to the urban heat island effect has not yet been investigated with an international scope. While we are well informed about forest growth under recent conditions, it is unclear if this knowledge can be simply transferred to urban environments.

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Does Carbon Dioxide ‘Trap Heat’?

Written by Carl Brehmer

There exists a particular science experiment that is done within primary, middle and secondary schools that purports to prove that there actually is a carbon dioxide and water vapor caused “greenhouse effect” in the greater atmosphere that is causing global warming.

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Fijigate: Sea Level Rise Hyped for Cash!

Written by Dr. Sebastian Lüning and Prof. Fritz Vahrenholt (Translated/edited by P. Gosselin)

The COP23 climate conference in Bonn had originally been planned to take place in the Fiji Islands. But in order to comfortably accommodate the approximately 25,000 representatives(!) from every country in the world, it was decided to hold it in Bonn.

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A Litigious Climate Threatens Scientific Norms

Written by Dr Roger Pielke Jr

An energy researcher sues another over a critical paper. It’s the wrong way to resolve such disputes.

I’ve worked alongside climate researchers for decades. Almost all of them are ethical, dedicated to science and not particularly political. But some leading figures and organizations in this community are weakening the norms that make science robust. A lawsuit filed in September and recently made public is a case in point.

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