2015년 2월 21일 토요일

ScienceDaily: Earth & Climate News

Posted: 20 Feb 2015 10:33 AM PST
Precipitation reconstructions are essential for predicting impacts of future climate change and preparing for potential changes in terrestrial environmental conditions. Reliable proxy records of paleoprecipitation, especially from past warm periods, are a valuable tool for assessing and modeling future soil and plant moisture and local water availability. However, current terrestrial proxies are limited in their applications, and as a result, a wide range of paleoenvironments are underrepresented in the geologic record.
Posted: 20 Feb 2015 08:08 AM PST
A professor has shown that improving wastewater treatment and saving energy are not only essential, but they’re also compatible.
Posted: 20 Feb 2015 07:15 AM PST
Research indicating Caribbean corals may be better equipped to tolerate climate change than previously believed could impact future studies on Australia's Great Barrier Reef.
Posted: 20 Feb 2015 07:14 AM PST
Researchers have released a detailed draft analysis of policy options for hydraulic fracturing, the natural gas and oil extraction process commonly known as fracking.
Posted: 20 Feb 2015 06:48 AM PST
Scientists have managed to quantify how the Greenland Ice Sheet reacted to a warm period 8,000-5,000 years ago. Back then temperatures were 2-4 degrees C warmer than they are in the present. Their results are important as we are rapidly closing in on similar temperatures.
Posted: 20 Feb 2015 05:37 AM PST
Regional climate change models predict an increased freshwater runoff into the Baltic Sea. This will result in increased inflow of terrestrial dissolved organic carbon. According to researchers, this change will have high impact on the organic pollutants on the organic pollutants in the northern Baltic Sea, since this carbon can interact with the pollutants and decrease their concentration in the water.
Posted: 20 Feb 2015 05:37 AM PST
Considerable debate surrounds the migration of human populations out of Africa. Two predominant hypotheses concerning the timing contrast in their emphasis on the role of the Arabian interior and its changing climate. In one scenario, human populations expanded rapidly from Africa to southern Asia via the coastlines of Arabia approx. 50,000 to 60,000 years ago. Another model suggests that dispersal into the Arabian interior began much earlier (approx. 75,000 to 130,000 years ago) during multiple phases, when increased rainfall provided sufficient freshwater to support expanding populations.
Posted: 18 Feb 2015 04:30 AM PST
Vietnam has thousands of "craft villages". Each one specializes in a particular craft: works of art, religious objects, textiles, basket-weaving, food processing, etc. In particular the capital, Hanoi, has more than 500 on its outskirts. Grouped into "clusters", these villages have modernized themselves and diversified since the country’s economy opened up in the 1980s. However, the ancient systems of production are being undermined by the competition for real estate and labor driven by the globalization of the markets and the metropolitanization of the capital.

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