Top Stories

What’s Really in our Food? A Global Look at Food Composition Databases—and the Gaps We Need to Fix

To build healthier food systems, we need better food data. A new research shows where the gaps are—and how innovations like PTFI are helping to close them.

>> Read the Full Article

Fossil Corals Point to Possibly Steeper Sea Level Rise Under a Warming World

Coastal planners take heed: Newly uncovered evidence from fossil corals found on an island chain in the Indian Ocean suggests that sea levels could rise even more steeply in our warming world than previously thought.

>> Read the Full Article

Wet Soils Increase Flooding During Atmospheric River Storms

A new study examined decades of atmospheric river storms across the West Coast to pinpoint the conditions that lead to catastrophic flooding.

>> Read the Full Article

A Third of Forests Lost This Century Will Likely Never Be Restored

Of the forest lost so far this century, roughly a third was destroyed to make room for farms, a new analysis finds. 

>> Read the Full Article

Winter Arrives Early in Lesotho and South Africa

A powerful storm system brought wintry conditions to Lesotho and South Africa in early June 2025. 

>> Read the Full Article

UT Arlington Researchers: Microplastics Are Infiltrating Our Drinking Water

Wastewater treatment plants are not effectively removing this tiny pollutant, study shows.

>> Read the Full Article

New Study Shows Alligators Aren’t All That’s Lurking in Georgia’s Swamps

Gator research uncovers increased levels of mercury in the state’s swamps.

>> Read the Full Article

Research Shows Rivers Release Ancient Carbon Dioxide Into the Atmosphere, Uncovering a Greater Role for Plants and Soil in the Carbon Cycle

A new study has revealed for the first time that ancient carbon, stored in landscapes for thousands of years or more, can find its way back to the atmosphere as CO₂ released from the surfaces of rivers.

>> Read the Full Article

AI Stirs up the Recipe for Concrete in MIT Study

With demand for cement alternatives rising, an MIT team uses machine learning to hunt for new ingredients across the scientific literature.

>> Read the Full Article

Environmental Engineer Studying Ohio River Pollution

Karen Noda Morishita is using analytic chemistry to quantify organic contaminants.

>> Read the Full Article