
New research highlights the immense power of fear. The emotion was strong enough to curb eating and reproduction among groups of fruit flies, increasing the likelihood of extinction.
Written by Brook Hays

New research highlights the immense power of fear. The emotion was strong enough to curb eating and reproduction among groups of fruit flies, increasing the likelihood of extinction.
Written by P Gosselin

Wind energy is supposed to rescue the planet from an environmental and nature disaster. Unfortunately for many in Germany, the opposite is true. It has brought on environmental ruin and destruction of natural heritage.
Written by JoNova

Poor Bill Nye -he thinks somehow most people are as religious about climate change as he is, and will keep their naively unscientific beliefs about our ability to control the climate with power stations, wind mills and light bulbs, into their old age.
Written by Kenneth Richard

Scientists: Temperature Data Contamination Accounts For 33{154653b9ea5f83bbbf00f55de12e21cba2da5b4b158a426ee0e27ae0c1b44117} – 75{154653b9ea5f83bbbf00f55de12e21cba2da5b4b158a426ee0e27ae0c1b44117} Of Modern Warming
Urban heat from paved roads, buildings, and machinery can artificially inflate temperatures substantially above measured temperatures from non-urban areas. This introduces a significant non-climatic warming bias into long-term records.
Written by Jesse Emspak

The Trojan asteroids that follow Mars in its orbit might have come from the planet itself, blown off in an ancient impact rather than being late arrivals, a new study suggests.
Written by Shreya Dasgupta

The massive ocean sunfish — an odd-looking fish with a flat, rigid, tailless body — is not only the world’s largest bony fish, but also one of the most elusive fishes in the world.
Written by Tony Heller
Climate alarmists got hysterical a few weeks ago about a forecast high temperature of 121F in Phoenix. It didn’t happen and wouldn’t have been unusual for Arizona anyway.
But on July 24, 1936, temperatures did reach 121F in Kansas, and 118F in Nebraska. Almost the entire US was over 90F.
Written by Alexandra Witze

Geologists and biologists are about to pierce one of the world’s youngest islands: tiny Surtsey, which was formed by a series of volcanic eruptions off Iceland’s southwestern coast between 1963 and 1967. Next month, the team plans to drill two holes into Surtsey’s heart, to explore how warm volcanic rock, cold seawater, and subterranean microbes interact.
Written by IEVPC

Major Earthquakes Predicted Months in Advance
Press Release 02-2017
9:00 AM EST
The International Earthquake and Volcano Prediction Center (IEVPC) announces today that it has once again successfully predicted catastrophic earthquakes months in advance.
Written by Samantha Mathewson

Ancient volcanic deposits on the Moon reveal new evidence about the lunar interior, suggesting it contains substantial amounts of water.
Written by Paul Homewood
According to the Government’s latest UK Climate Change Risk Assessment, sea levels around the UK are rising by around 3mm a year.
This is an outright lie.
Written by Michael Peter Galvin

The term ‘Radiative Forcing’ that was first defined in IPCC reports is non-measurable as it changes with altitude (temperature), due to moist adiabatic lapse rate the latent heat absorbed rises to a cooler upper atmosphere and latent heat is released on precipitation that cools and cleans the atmosphere and surfaces again.
Written by DECCAN CHRONICLE

In saliva, scientists have found hints that a “ghost” species of archaic humans may have contributed genetic material to ancestors of people living in Sub-Saharan Africa today.
Written by Dr. Craig Idso

Many are the studies that seek to understand the response of marine life to possible future conditions of ocean acidification and warming. The latest such study to catch our attention comes from Bahr et al. (2017), but not quite in the manner that one might think; it is what this study did not find that was of interest to us.
Written by Mariella Moon

NASA has given Lockheed Martin the go-ahead to build a full-scale prototype of the deep space habitat it proposed for the NextSTEP program.
Written by P Gosselin

A commentary appearing here at the Swiss Baseler Zeitung (BAZ) slams a recently published British paper on moss growth in Antarctica that gave the impression the south polar continent was greening up due to climate change.
The BAZ writes that the paper is an example of “how today science is manipulated and used for political purposes“.