One of the grand challenges for materials science is the design and discovery of new materials that address global priorities such as Net Zero.
Increasing access to water in extremely arid parts of sub-Saharan Africa can help nomadic livestock farmers in the short term.
A new Tulane University study published in Nature Communications offers a glimpse into the possible impact of climate change on coastal wetlands 50 years or longer into the future.
An ephemeral lake in Death Valley’s Badwater Basin is showing its staying power.
Africa's forested areas – an estimated 14 % of the global forest area – are continuing to decline at an increasing rate – mostly because of human activities to convert forest land for economic purposes.
The new research project YESSS - Year-round EcoSystem Study on Svalbard - is focusing on how Arctic warming is changing over the seasons in Svalbard.
AWI research team shows that jellyfish play an important, previously unknown role in the diet of amphipods during the polar night.
Industry-academia partnership takes innovation in coral e-DNA monitoring to the next level.
Throughout human history, technologies have been used to make peoples’ lives richer and more comfortable, but they have also contributed to a global crisis threatening Earth’s climate, ecosystems and even our own survival.
Wetlands are Earth’s largest natural source of methane, a potent greenhouse gas that is about 30 times more powerful than carbon dioxide at warming the atmosphere.
Page 20 of 2424
ENN Daily Newsletter
ENN Weekly Newsletter