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  1. Home
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  3. oxygen
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  5. Page 2
Home»Posts tagged with»oxygen (Page 2)

Warming Climate Unlikely to Cause Major Methane Release

By National Science Foundation on Mar 3, 2020   Featured, Science/Education, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Warming Climate Unlikely to Cause Major Methane Release

  A long-feared scenario in which global warming causes Arctic permafrost to melt and release enough methane—a potent greenhouse gas–to accelerate warming and cause catastrophe probably won’t happen. That is the conclusion of a study appearing in the journal Science that began more than 20 years ago as a query posed by Jeff Severinghaus, a geoscientist at the Scripps Institution […]

Breath of Clams Leads to Big Picture

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on May 10, 2019   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Breath of Clams Leads to Big Picture

  To learn more about one of the largest environmental changes of our lifetimes, Brittany Jones studies clam breath. Jones is a student earning her Ph.D. at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. She is an expert on creatures that live in the muck covering the underwater continental shelf off western Alaska. There, sea ice waxes […]

Biggest Extinction in Earth’s History Caused by Global Warming

By Hannah Hickey | University of Washington on Dec 10, 2018   Featured, Science/Education  

Biggest Extinction in Earth’s History Caused by Global Warming

  [dropcap]T[/dropcap]he largest extinction in Earth’s history marked the end of the Permian period, some 252 million years ago. Long before dinosaurs, our planet was populated with plants and animals that were mostly obliterated after a series of massive volcanic eruptions in Siberia. Fossils in ancient seafloor rocks display a thriving and diverse marine ecosystem, […]

ALMA and VLT Find Evidence for Stars Forming Just 250 Million Years After Big Bang

By ESO on May 16, 2018   Science/Education  

ALMA and VLT Find Evidence for Stars Forming Just 250 Million Years After Big Bang

Astronomers have used observations from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) and ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) to determine that star formation in the very distant galaxy MACS1149-JD1 started at an unexpectedly early stage, only 250 million years after the Big Bang. This discovery also represents the most distant oxygen ever detected in the Universe […]

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