A catastrophic forest die-off in California’s Sierra Nevada mountain range in 2015-2016 was caused by the inability of trees to reach diminishing supplies of subsurface water following years of severe drought and abnormally warm temperatures.
articles
Why Some Cities Turn Off the Water Pipes at Night
For more than a billion people around the world, running water comes from “intermittent systems” that turn on and off at various times of the week.
Controlling Deadly Malaria Without Chemicals
Scientists have finally found malaria’s Achilles’ heel, a neurotoxin that isn’t harmful to any living thing except Anopheles mosquitoes that spread malaria.
Getting More Heat Out of Sunlight
A newly developed material that is so perfectly transparent you can barely see it could unlock many new uses for solar heat.
New Material Shows High Potential for Quantum Computing
A joint team of scientists at the University of California, Riverside, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology is getting closer to confirming the existence of an exotic quantum particle called Majorana fermion, crucial for fault-tolerant quantum computing — the kind of quantum computing that addresses errors during its operation.
Deep Submersible Dives Shed Light on Rarely Explored Coral Reefs
Just beyond where conventional scuba divers can go is an area of the ocean that still is largely unexplored. In waters this deep — about 100 to at least 500 feet below the surface — little to no light breaks through.


