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  5. Page 135
Home»Archives»Science/Education (Page 135)

New Method May Help Anticipate Large Volcanic Eruptions

By Fritz Freudenberger | Geophysical Institute on May 20, 2020   Featured, Science/Education, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

New Method May Help Anticipate Large Volcanic Eruptions

  Volcanic eruptions are not easy to anticipate. Now, a new paper proposes a way to provide early clues by evaluating magma movement far beneath volcanoes. The Bárdarbunga volcanic system in Iceland began to erupt from a fissure on Aug. 29, 2014. By the time it quit six months later, it had created an almost 33-square-mile lava […]

New Research Analyzes 40+ Years of Alaska Homicide Data for First Time, Providing Unprecedented Look at Homicides in the State Since 1976

By UAA on May 20, 2020   Featured, General News, Science/Education  

New Research Analyzes 40+ Years of Alaska Homicide Data for First Time, Providing Unprecedented Look at Homicides in the State Since 1976

  Report reveals disproportionate impacts on Alaska Native and African American populations, among other significant findings   ANCHORAGE, AK – The University of Alaska Anchorage Justice Center has released Homicide in Alaska: 1976 – 2016, a new report that compiles 41 years of data from the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Supplementary Homicide Report. While the […]

Radar Gauges Methane Release from Arctic Lakes

By Jeff Richardson | UAF on May 15, 2020   Featured, Science/Education, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Radar Gauges Methane Release from Arctic Lakes

  A University of Alaska Fairbanks-led research team has developed a way to use satellite images to determine the amount of methane being released from northern lakes, a technique that could help climate change modelers better account for this potent greenhouse gas. By using synthetic aperture radar, or SAR, researchers were able to find a […]

Dinosaurs Striding Across the Land Bridge

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on May 15, 2020   Science/Education, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Dinosaurs Striding Across the Land Bridge

  [smartslider3 slider=6] The recent discovery of the most complete dinosaur skeleton ever found in Japan suggests the duck-billed creatures once stomped across the Bering Land Bridge. The dinosaur found in Japan is very similar to Edmontosaurus, fossils of which have been found throughout Alaska. The creatures may have been more adaptable and widespread than […]

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