In a study recently published
at Nature Climate Change, I demonstrate that interest in scientific topics at young ages (12 - 14) is associated with increased trust in climate scientists decades later in adulthood, across the ideological spectrum.
What you meant to say, Dr. Curry, is which ass clown (s)
at Nature Climate Change put the stamp of approval on this.
Check out the entire study
at Nature Climate Change: «Mapping vulnerability and conservation adaptation strategies under climate change.»
Not exact matches
The report in Monday's edition of the journal
Nature Climate Change dents many governments» hopes that recession can
at least bring the consolation of a sharp contraction in greenhouse gas emissions.
In the study published in the journal
Nature Climate Change, researchers
at the Stockholm Environment Institute write that widely quoted U.S. State Department findings that the oilsands pipeline wouldn't make a significant difference missed a major source of greenhouse gas emissions.
It has also had significant environmental consequences — set aside
climate change and, if nothing else, think of industrial toxicity
at the scale of Lake Michigan's southwest shoreline, New Jersey's Chemical Coast, or the chemical plants and oil refineries immediately north of Louisiana's State Capitol grounds in Baton Rouge, the long - term effects of which remain unknown — and has prompted not only environmentalist discontent and backlash, but also a neo-pagan anthropology and cosmology in which
nature itself is increasingly understood as sacred.
I confess that I have become somewhat blasé about the range of exciting — I think revolutionary is probably more accurate — technologies that we are rolling out today: our work in genomics and its translation into varieties that are reaching poor farmers today; our innovative integration of long — term and multilocation trials with crop models and modern IT and communications technology to reach farmers in ways we never even imagined five years ago; our vision to create a C4 rice and see to it that Golden Rice reaches poor and hungry children; maintaining productivity gains in the face of dynamic pests and pathogens; understanding the
nature of the rice grain and what makes for good quality; our many efforts to change the way rice is grown to meet the challenges of changing rural economies, changing societies, and a changing
climate; and, our extraordinary array of partnerships that has placed us
at the forefront of the CGIAR change process through the Global Rice Science Partnership.
Climate Change Exhibit Coming to Notebaert
Nature Museum - ABC 7 Chicago - March 29, 2016
Climate change is the inspiration for a new exhibit opening this weekend
at the Peggy Notebaert
Nature Museum.
The Opening Bell 3/27/17: Children Learn About
Climate Change & the Next Steps for Sears - WGN Radio - March 27, 2017 After a hands on experience at the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum Steve sat down with Kristen Pratt (Director of Sustainability at The Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum) to talk about the new exhibit that will be teaching young children and adults about the basics of climate
Climate Change & the Next Steps for Sears - WGN Radio - March 27, 2017 After a hands on experience
at the Peggy Notebaert
Nature Museum Steve sat down with Kristen Pratt (Director of Sustainability
at The Peggy Notebaert
Nature Museum) to talk about the new exhibit that will be teaching young children and adults about the basics of
climate climate change.
Peggy Notebaert
Nature Museum Exhibit Explores Weather to
Climate - WDCB 90.9 FM - June 7, 2016 The Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum's newest exhibit offers visitors a closer look at climate change and how it affects everyda
Climate - WDCB 90.9 FM - June 7, 2016 The Peggy Notebaert
Nature Museum's newest exhibit offers visitors a closer look
at climate change and how it affects everyda
climate change and how it affects everyday life.
But «Weather to
Climate: Our Changing World,» a new exhibit opening
at the Peggy Notebaert
Nature Museum on Saturday, April 2, is taking on the daunting task and making «the talk,» as it relates to global warming, easier on youngsters and their caregivers alike.
Peggy Notebaert
Nature Museum's Butterfly Ball - Splash - May 19, 2016 Partygoers became one with nature — interacting with snakes, tasting local honey and exploring the museum's newest climate exhibition — at the 18th annual ball
Nature Museum's Butterfly Ball - Splash - May 19, 2016 Partygoers became one with
nature — interacting with snakes, tasting local honey and exploring the museum's newest climate exhibition — at the 18th annual ball
nature — interacting with snakes, tasting local honey and exploring the museum's newest
climate exhibition —
at the 18th annual ball May 6.
Why are we so excited about keeping things natural when it comes to birth, while we remain dedicated to rejecting
nature when it comes to, say,
climate control or the ability to buy to buy out of season
at the grocery store all winter long?
Her work Through The Ice, Darkly can currently be seen
at the
Nature Museum as part of Weather to
Climate: Our Changing World (open through October 23).
In the years since Copenhagen, those inside and outside the political drama of what goes on
at the UNFCCC process have come to recognise the multilevel, multilayered
nature of global
climate action, where an intergovernmental treaty is just one, and perhaps not even the most central, element.
«What we want to focus on is making sure this country is really resilient and robust to whatever
nature throws
at us whether there's a
climate element or not.»
A trial of double - blind peer review began in June 2013
at Nature Geoscience and
Nature Climate Change, and Conservation Biology is considering adopting the practice.
The scientific journal
Nature ecology & evolution have published a joint statement from scientists
at Center for Macroecology, Evolution and
Climate, University of Copenhagen and North Carolina State University.
'' [E] missions of black carbon are the second strongest contribution to current global warming, after carbon dioxide emissions,» wrote Veerabhadran Ramanathan, a prominent
climate scientist
at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, and Greg Carmichael, a professor of chemical engineering
at the University of Iowa, in the April 2008 issue of the journal
Nature Geoscience.
«If CO2 leaked from storage and reached the seafloor, then the environmental impact will be measurable, but very restricted in area and not catastrophic,» said Jerry Blackford, a marine system modeler
at Plymouth Marine Laboratory and author of the paper, published yesterday in
Nature Climate Change.
The
Nature Conservancy hopes that what it learns about the project will make it easier for other communities weighing similar projects to move forward with natural systems, McLeod said last week, speaking on a panel about
climate adaptation and resilience
at the same event as Bostick.
Judge Coffin says the
nature, facts and drivers of
climate change will be central to the case — including whether there is a threshold
at which the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere reaches a tipping point locking in irreversible planetary damage.
The degree to which humans are dominating
nature in shaping the
climate, they assert, can not be known using the tools scientists presently have
at their command.
A new study published in
Nature Climate Change looks
at the next 10,000 years, and finds that the catastrophic impact of another three centuries of carbon pollution will persist millennia after the carbon dioxide releases cease.
The findings, which were published today in the journal
Nature Climate Change, show that limiting warming to 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit (1.5 degrees Celsius) would reduce the likelihood of an ice - free Arctic summer to 30 percent by the year 2100, whereas warming by 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit (2 degrees Celsius) would make
at least one ice - free summer certain.
These findings from University of Melbourne Scientists
at the ARC Centre of Excellence for
Climate System Science, reported in
Nature Climate Change, are the result of research looking
at how Australian extremes in heat, drought, precipitation and ocean warming will change in a world 1.5 °C and 2 °C warmer than pre-industrial conditions.
In an article published Aug. 31 in
Nature Climate Change, Lin and her coauthor Kerry Emanuel, a professor of atmospheric science
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, examined potential storm hazards for three cities: Tampa, Fla.; Cairns, Australia; and Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
Duncan Marsh, director of the international
climate program
at the
Nature Conservancy, said both leaders» speeches were made not only to the world leaders assembled
at the U.N. conference but also to their home audiences.
Due to
climate change, she said, the world faces «one of the most daunting crossroads in the evolution of human history, we are
at the point where we must decide: are we going to ignore science or are we going to rise to the call of history and forge a new life on Earth paradigm... where
nature and humanity support each other.»
A report in the last issue of
Nature finds that between April 2002 and April 2006, the rate
at which southern Greenland's ice liquefied jumped by 250 percent — supporting the idea that the Greenland ice sheet responds quickly to slight changes in
climate.
«We have detected the human fingerprint in both the Arctic and Antarctic region [s],» says Peter Stott, a
climate modeler
at the U.K. Met (meteorological) Office's Hadley Center, and co-author of the study published in the journal
Nature Geoscience.
These results have been presented in
Nature Communications by an international collaboration led by the US Geological Survey and members from seven countries, including Scott Wilson
at the
Climate Impacts Research Centre (CIRC)
at Umeå University in Sweden.
«If we could look back
at this region of Antarctica in the 1940s and 1830s, we would find that the regional
climate would look a lot like it does today, and I think we also would find the glaciers retreating much as they are today,» said Steig, lead author of a paper on the findings published online April 14 in
Nature Geoscience.
The paper (DOI 10.1038 / ngeo2957), published May 29 in
Nature Geoscience, is the first to look
at biosphere - atmosphere interactions using purely observational data and could greatly improve weather and
climate predictions critical to crop management, food security, water supplies, droughts, and heat waves.
Jef Huisman, an aquatic microbiology professor and theoretical ecologist
at the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands, said that the Princeton research shows that recently proposed early - warning signals for the desertification of arid ecosystems can be too simple, and possibly result in projections of future
climate change that do not account for the complexity of
nature.
It follows much discussion on the
nature of global change in a warmer 21st Century
at the COP23
Climate Negotiations in Bonn last week.
So a group of researchers from all over Europe turned to looking
at the timing of flooding, as the seasonal
nature of them is tied much more closely to
climate than to any other interfering factors.
In a study published in the actual volume of
Nature Communications, geo - and
climate researchers
at the Alfred - Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar - and Marine Research (AWI) show that, in the course of our planet's history, summertime sea ice was to be found in the central Arctic in periods characterised by higher global temperatures — but less CO2 — than today.
«The Mediterranean
climate reconstructed for the archaeological levels
at Pakefield suggests that these pioneers were able to spread northward in familiar climactic conditions, using their existing adaptations,» the team writes in the current issue of
Nature.
A 2017 paper published by researchers
at Imperial College London in the journal
Nature Climate Change found that carbon utilization is unlikely to contribute more than 1 percent of needed greenhouse gas reductions in future years, Rubin noted.
The researchers are calling for guidelines produced by the International Union for Conservation of
Nature (IUCN) Red List, the world's main authority on species that are
at risk of extinction, to be updated to include cautionary messages on some methodologies of
climate change risk assessment.
Published yesterday in
Nature Climate Change, the research suggests there's less time than previously believed to address global warming, said Michael Mann, a climatologist
at Pennsylvania State University.
This grim outlook is reinforced in a study published
at the same time in
Nature Climate Change (DOI: 10.1038 / nclimate1533).
The study, published online today in
Nature Communications, used sophisticated
climate model simulations to show that El Niño tends to peak during the year after large volcanic eruptions like the one
at Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines in 1991.
Annual losses from floods, now
at $ 4.9 billion, will reach $ 23 billion by 2050 (
Nature Climate Change, doi.org/rqp).
«Carbon - reduction policies significantly improve air quality,» says Noelle Selin, an assistant professor of engineering systems and atmospheric chemistry
at MIT, and co-author of a study published today in
Nature Climate Change.
The study, published this week in the journal
Nature Climate Change, was done by a team
at Columbia University's Earth Institute and the Mailman School of Public Health.
The findings, which have just been published in three separate scientific journals — Earth System Science Data, Environmental Research Letters and
Nature Climate Change — will also be presented today at the U.N. climate conference in Bonn, G
Climate Change — will also be presented today
at the U.N.
climate conference in Bonn, G
climate conference in Bonn, Germany.
The history of these observations is quite long (volunteers started to collect this data in the 1950s as indicated in their
Nature Scientific Data publication) and their uses are various: from supporting the planning and execution of various agronomical practices, to studying the magnitude and direction of
climate change
at continental scales.
Duncan Marsh, director of international
climate policy
at the
Nature Conservancy, praised Indonesia's
climate efforts and noted that the government said it can achieve the deeper end of its 29 - to -41-percent emissions curb by 2030 if it receives international finance.