A slow-moving rainstorm overwhelmed rivers and reservoirs, leading to deadly flooding in the province of Henan.
articles
MRIs On Crop Roots Open New Doors For Agriculture
Texas A&M scientists are applying the imaging technology to develop crops with deeper roots and stronger drought resilience.
New Method to Detect Impact of Sea Level Rise
University of Adelaide scientists have developed a new simple, inexpensive and fast method to analyse sulfur isotopes, which can be used to help investigate chemical changes in environments such as oceans, and freshwater rivers and lakes.
Optimizing Phase Change Materials Could Reduce Power Plant Water Consumption
Trillions of gallons of water are used annually to prevent power plants from overheating. A Texas A&M research group is looking into alternative methods of cooling steam turbines.
Just 5 Percent of Electric Plants Responsible for 73 percent of Power Sector Emissions
Just 5 percent of all power plants globally — all of them coal-fired — are responsible for 73 percent of electricity-sector carbon emissions, according to a new study that calls for cutting emissions from “hyper-polluting” power plants.
Save Our Pollinators, Save Our World
The director of the Texas A&M Honey Bee Lab explains the large role these small insects and animals play in our food supply.