April 11, 2007 24/7 News Coverage life as we know it
Farmland Across China At Risk From Pollution
Beijing (AFP) April 09, 2007
China's farmland is becoming increasingly polluted, with coal-dependent factories and polluted waterways causing billions of dollars in damages, state press reported Monday. Heavy metals contaminate 12 million tonnes of grains each year, leading to direct losses of more than 20 billion yuan (2.6 billion dollars), the China Daily said, citing the nation's environmental watchdog. More than 1 ... read more

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Thailand Scraps Tsunami Warning Test For Fear Of Creating Panic
Bangkok (AFP) April 08, 2007
Thai authorities cancelled tests of 79 tsunami warning towers along its coast over fears they would cause panic among tourists and locals, senior officials said Sunday. Thailand, which was hit by deadly waves two years ago, began Saturday testing the loudspeakers on the towers along the Andaman coast, which had recently been linked up by satellite to a US-funded deep-sea warning buoy deplo ... more

  • disaster-management: Tsunami Aid Yet To Reach Remote Solomons Villages
  • disaster-management: Tradition Blamed For Slow Solomons Relief

    Marine Scientists Monitor Longest Mammal Migration
    Moss Landing, CA (SPX) Apr 11, 2007
    Marine scientists recently published a research paper in the science journal, biology letters, that found humpback whales migrate over 5,100 miles from Central America to their feeding grounds off Antarctica; a record distance undertaken by any mammal. Kristin Rasmussen, a biologist with Cascadia Research Collective, and lead author in the study, finds the record-breaking migration interes ... more

    Why Small Dogs Are Small
    Salt Lake City UT (SPX) Apr 11, 2007
    Soon after humans began domesticating dogs 12,000 to 15,000 years ago, they started breeding small canines. Now, scientists from the University of Utah and seven other institutions have identified a piece of doggy DNA that reduces the activity of a growth gene, ensuring that small breeds stay small. The small piece of DNA is not a gene, but is known as a regulatory sequence. It is located ... more

    MORE HEADLINES

  • interndaily: Chinese Healthcare Gap Widens
  • interndaily: Medical Technology Gets Personal

  • atmosphere: University Of Colorado Instruments To Launch On NASA Cloud Mission
  • africa: Ancient Coral Reef Tells The History Of Kenyan Soil Erosion
  •   bees:
  • Mysterious Disappearance Of US Bees Creating A Buzz

    volcano:
  • NASA Data Show Earthquakes May Quickly Boost Regional Volcanoes

    whales:
  • US Sushi Supplier Under Fire Over Raw Deal
  •  
    High-Res Images Herald New Era In Earth Sciences
    Boston MA (SPX) Apr 10, 2007
    High-resolution images that reveal unexpected details of the Earth's internal structure are among the results reported by MIT and Purdue scientists in the March 30 issue of Science ... read more
    Light Shed On Long-Term Effects Of Logging After Wildfire
    Portland OR (SPX) Apr 10, 2007
    A new study on the effects of timber harvest following wildfire shows that the potential for a recently burned forest to reburn can be high with or without logging. Recently published in the journal, Forest Ecology and Management, the study demonstrates that the likelihood of a severe reburn is affected by the timing - not just the amount - of fuel accumulation after fire. The study examin ... more

    Invasive Grass May Impede Forest Regeneration
    Asheville NC (SPX) Apr 10, 2007
    The nonnative invasive grass Microstegium vimineum may hinder the regeneration of woody species in southern forests. Chris and Sonja Oswalt (Forest Service Southern Research Station) and Wayne Clatterbuck (University of Tennessee) set up experiments on a mixed-hardwood forest in southwest Tennessee to study the growth of the invasive grass under different levels of forest disturbance. Stud ... more

    Trees To Offset The Carbon Footprint
    Livermore CA (SPX) Apr 10, 2007
    How effective are new trees in offsetting the carbon footprint? A new study suggests that the location of the new trees is an important factor when considering such carbon offset projects. Planting and preserving forests in the tropics is more likely to slow down global warming. But the study concludes that planting new trees in certain parts of the planet may actually warm the Earth. ... more

    MORE HEADLINES
  • farm: Anthropologist Finds Earliest Evidence Of Maize Farming In Mexico
  • interndaily: Nanotextured Implant Materials: Blending in, Not Fighting Back
  • earthquake: Quake Lifts Solomons Island Metres From The Sea
  • interndaily: Engineering The Heart Piece By Piece
  • arctic: NASA Finds Arctic Replenished Very Little Thick Sea Ice in 2005
  • disaster-management: Emergency Health Plans That Work
  • early-earth: Seats Helped Ancient Greeks Hear From Back Row
  • human: Why The Rich Get Richer
  • hurricane: Rare Tornado In Western Japan
  • life: Trends In Bird Observations Reveal Changing Fortunes For Different Species
  • arctic: IARC Scientist To Lead Sea Ice Expedition
  • snow: Snowmelt Monitored In The Baltic Sea Watershed Region In Near Real Time
  •   africa:
  • More Elephants Dieing On Highways

    volcano:
  • Expedition Depicts Apocalypse At Summit Of Reunion's Volcano

    disaster-management:
  • Relief Workers Step Up Efforts For Solomons Tsunami Victims
  •  
    Slowly But Surely Burned Forest Lands Regenerate Naturally
    Corvallis OR (SPX) Apr 09, 2007
    A new study of forest lands that burned in the 1990s in northern California and southwestern Oregon has concluded there is a "fair to excellent" chance that an adequate level of conifers will regenerate naturally, in sites that had no manual planting or other forest management. The research, to be published Wednesday in the Journal of Forestry by scientists from Oregon State University, examined the recovery of conifers on 35 plots that had burned in wildfires from 9 to 19 years ago, and generally found a high level of naturally-regenerating tree seedlings ... read more
    Boost In Rice Production To Avoid Food Shortages In Indonesia
    Jakarta, Indonesia (SPX) Apr 09, 2007
    Efforts by Indonesia to avoid food shortages by increasing its rice production have received an important boost with the signing of a new agreement to help the nation's millions of poor rice farmers with new technologies. Senior officials and scientists of the Indonesian Agency for Agricultural Research and Development (IAARD), and other agencies of the Indonesian Ministry of Agriculture, ... more

    Cable Laid For New Deep-Sea Observatory
    Moss Landing CA (SPX) Apr 09, 2007
    On April 1, 2007 researchers completed an important step in constructing the first deep-sea cabled observatory in the continental United States. In a multi-institution effort managed by the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI) and funded by the National Science Foundation, 52 kilometers (32 miles) of cable were laid along the seafloor of Monterey Bay. This undersea cable will provide ... more

    Earth Had Strong Magnetic Field Over Three Billion Years Ago
    Rochester NY (SPX) Apr 09, 2007
    Geophysicists at the University of Rochester have reported that the Earth's magnetic field was nearly as strong 3.2 billion years ago as it is today. The findings, which are contrary to previous studies, suggest that even in its earliest stages the Earth was already well protected from the solar wind, which can strip away a planet's atmosphere and bathe its surface in lethal radiation ... more

      disaster-management:
  • Empty Homes Signal New Aceh Tsunami Hurdle

    earthquake:
  • Media Bias Distorts Details Of Past Quakes

    climate:
  • Want To Monitor Climate Change Pick Up A Penguin
  •  
    Previous Issues Apr 09 Apr 05 Apr 04 Apr 03 Apr 02

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