Few craters are as large, or as old, as this impact structure in southeastern Ontario, Canada.
articles
From Safe Drinking Water to Sustainable Fisheries, NOAA GLERL’s Experimental Lake Erie Hypoxia Forecast Is Even More Useful Than Anticipated
By forecasting potential hypoxic upwelling events that could impact water quality, NOAA GLERL’s Experimental Hypoxia Forecast Model helps drinking water plant managers be prepared to adjust their treatment processes as needed.
Research On Greater Amberjack To Be One Of Largest Fish Studies Of Its Kind
Texas A&M-Galveston’s Jay Rooker and David Wells will be part of a team to see if the species is facing declining numbers.
Now Available: International Guidelines on Natural and Nature-Based Features for Flood Risk Management
Informing the implementation of nature-based solutions and natural infrastructure as an alternative to conventional hardened infrastructure.
Tiny Porous Crystals Change the Shape of Water to Speed up Chemical Reactions
Chemical engineers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign now understand how water molecules assemble and change shape in some settings, revealing a new strategy to speed up chemical reactions critical to industry and environmental sustainability.
California Utility Expands Use Of Texas A&M Wildfire Prevention System
PG&E engineers call outage prediction tool ‘fundamental’ to reducing risk.