A new study, published in the current
issue of Nature Geoscience, has been able to measure the rate of Patagonia glacier loss over the last several hundred years.
I'm still reading other stuff as mentioned above, but just wanted to note that Matt Huber has an open - access climate sensitivity perspective piece in the latest
issue of Nature Geoscience.
«The conditions under which such switches occur should be investigated, as they directly affect the ability of an ice sheet to slide over its bed,» advises Joseph A. McGregor, of the University of Texas at Austin, writing in the same
issue of Nature Geoscience.
The results are published in the current
issue of Nature Geoscience.
Research Team: The research was done by Zhanqing Li, Feng Niu and Yanni Ding of the University of Maryland; Jiwen Fan of PNNL; Yangang Liu of Brookhaven National laboratory; and Daniel Rosenfeld of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and is published in the November 13
issue of Nature Geoscience.
The study, published online Oct. 5 and appearing in the November
issue of Nature Geoscience, comes from Charles Lesher, professor of Earth and Planetary Science at UC Davis and a visiting professor at Aarhus University, and his former PhD student, Eric Brown, now a post-doctoral scholar at Aarhus University.
The oil itself does not appear to help the phytoplankton, but the low concentration of oil found above natural seeps isn't killing them, and turbulence from the rising oil and gas bubbles is bringing up deep - water nutrients that phytoplankton need to grow, according to a new study appearing in the latest
issue of Nature Geoscience.
The international research initiative IceGeoHeat led by the GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences establishes in the current online
issue of Nature Geoscience that this effect can not be neglected when modeling the ice sheet as part of a climate study.
In their latest paper, published in the February
issue of Nature Geoscience, Dr Philip Goodwin from the University of Southampton and Professor Ric Williams from the University of Liverpool have projected that if immediate action isn't taken, Earth's global average temperature is likely to rise to 1.5 °C above the period before the industrial revolution within the next 17 - 18 years, and to 2.0 °C in 35 - 41 years respectively if the carbon emission rate remains at its present - day value.
His research was published in the Research Highlight section of the July
issue of Nature Geoscience.
Not exact matches
'' [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.
The findings — published online Jan. 19 ahead
of print in the February
issue of the journal
Nature Geoscience — «help explain why so many
of the volcanoes in the Galapagos are active,» Toomey said.
The study appears in the current
issue of the journal
Nature Geoscience.
Published in the current
issue of the journal
Nature Geoscience, the paper uses laboratory simulations
of an Earth impact as evidence that a stratified layer beneath the rocky mantle — which appears in seismic data — was created when Earth was struck by a smaller object.
In a paper released in the November 14, 2016
issue of the journal
Nature Geoscience, Repeta and colleagues at the University
of Hawaii found that much
of the ocean's dissolved organic matter is made up
of novel polysaccharides — long chains
of sugar molecules created by photosynthetic bacteria in the upper ocean.
UNLV Ph.D. candidate's research in Russia challenges widely held understanding
of past climate history; study appears in latest
issue of top journal
Nature Geoscience.
By Rasmus Benestad & Michael Mann Just as Typhoon Nargis has reminded us
of the destructive power
of tropical cyclones (with its horrible death toll in Burma — around 100,000 according to the UN), a new paper by Knutson et al in the latest
issue of the journal
Nature Geosciences purports to project a reduction in Atlantic hurricane activity (principally the «frequency» but also integrated measures
of powerfulness).
«Increasing the ratio
of black carbon to sulphate in the atmosphere increases climate warming, suggests a study conducted by a University
of Iowa professor and his colleagues and published in the July 25
issue of the journal
Nature Geoscience.»
The geologists, who publish their research in the new
issue Nature Geoscience, say that measures
of carbon which are taken from deep sea core samples are probably not accurate.
In a set
of papers in the July
issue 2009
of Nature Geoscience (behind a pay wall) devoted to sea - level rise,... researchers are acknowledging that a single value
of projected sea level doesn't fit all.