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Home»Posts tagged with»cooling

Cooling Center Open for Elders in Juneau

By Central Council of Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska on Jun 27, 2022   Events/Notices, General News  

Cooling Center Open for Elders in Juneau

Dates: June 27-29, 2022 Times: 8:00 AM-5:00 PM Location: Elizabeth Peratrovich Hall (320 West Willoughby Avenue • Juneau, AK)   Last week, the National Weather Service issued a special weather warning for a potential heat wave that could affect many Southeast Alaska communities. Although the heat wave has been downgraded, we are still expecting above […]

Site of Asteroid Impact Changed the History of Life

By Kunio Kaiho/Naga Oshima | Tohoku University on Nov 10, 2017   Featured, Science/Education  

Site of Asteroid Impact Changed the History of Life

An asteroid, also known as the Chicxulub Impactor, hit Earth some 66 million years ago, causing a crater 180 km wide. The impact of the asteroid heated organic matter in rocks and ejected it into the atmosphere, forming soot in the stratosphere. Soot is a strong, light-absorbing aerosol that caused global climate changes that triggered […]

Dinosaur-Killing Asteroid Impact May Have Cooled Earth more than Previously Thought

By American Geophysical Union on Nov 1, 2017   Science/Education  

Dinosaur-Killing Asteroid Impact May Have Cooled Earth more than Previously Thought

WASHINGTON D.C. — The Chicxulub asteroid impact that wiped out the dinosaurs likely released far more climate-altering sulfur gas into the atmosphere than originally thought, according to new research. A new study makes a more refined estimate of how much sulfur and carbon dioxide gas were ejected into Earth’s atmosphere from vaporized rocks immediately after the […]

How Honey Bees Stay Cool

By Alexander Reid | Tufts University on Jul 25, 2014   Science/Education  

MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, Mass. – Honey bees, especially the young, are highly sensitive to temperature and to protect developing bees, adults work together to maintain temperatures within a narrow range. Recently published research led by Philip T. Starks, a biologist at Tufts University’s School of Arts and Sciences, is the first to show that worker bees dissipate […]



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