Satellites now play a key role in monitoring carbon levels in the oceans, but we are only just beginning to understand their full potential.
articles
UniSA Researchers a Step Closer to Reducing Childhood Lead Exposure by Amending the Soil
The link between Port Pirie’s lead smelter emissions and childhood health issues is well documented, but a new study reveals a possible solution for reducing childhood lead exposure – amending the soil.
Researchers Can Now Quickly, Accurately Scan Produce For Nutrient Content
Texas A&M AgriLife scientists find fruitful applications of Raman spectroscopy in food production, from the field to the grocery store.
Food Waste in Tourism is a Bigger Issue Than Previously Thought
There are major gaps in how food waste in tourism is understood and calculated, according to researchers at the University of Eastern Finland and the University of Southern California.
Palu Landslides Linked to Rice Irrigation
Just downhill from the Gumbasa Aqueduct, farmers practice wet rice cultivation involving the purposeful flooding of fields. This flooding also raises the water table underground. The excess groundwater directly contributed to the 2018 landslides.
Oxygen in Old Rocks Reveals New Details of Its Own Early History on Earth
Despite bearing witness to its own increase in Earth's atmosphere by around 2.5 to 2.3 billion years ago, oxygen has had relatively little to say about its own early history until now.