Climate & Environment
- A rash of earthquakes in Colorado and New Mexico between 2008 and 2010 was likely due to fluids pumped deep underground during oil and gas wastewater disposal, says a new study.
- ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ÆÆ½â°æÏÂÔØ engineers are testing a new technique to clean up western Colorado sites contaminated by uranium mining.
- ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ÆÆ½â°æÏÂÔØ and collaborating partners have been awarded $2.9 million from the National Science Foundation to create a digital archive of more than 1.7 million plant specimens native to the southern Rocky Mountain region.
- Jason Boardman has made headlines studying the interactions between people's genes and their environment. Now he's helping launch a first-of-its-kind program to train young scholars in the cross-disciplinary field.
- An NSIDC-led project will explore how indigenous peoples living in the arid U.S. Southwest and icy Arctic are adapting to rapid social and environmental changes that affect food security.
- Caterpillars have far less bacteria and fungi inhabiting their guts than other organisms, making them an evolutionary oddity in the animal kingdom.
- A team of ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ÆÆ½â°æÏÂÔØ scientists is working to unlock a longstanding ecological mystery: barren patches of ground in Africa's grasslands known as fairy circles.
- This summer, undergraduates have been working in deep freeze conditions, cutting up ice cores to analyze ancient climate information.
- Conditions thousands of years ago can leave a lasting mark on present-day soil microbes, new research finds.
- An abnormal season of intense glacial melt in 2002 triggered multiple distinct changes in the physical and biological characteristics of Antarctica's McMurdo Dry Valleys over the ensuing decade.