Plant material that lies to rot in soil isn’t just valuable as compost.
articles
Mapping Extreme Snowmelt and its Potential Dangers
Snowmelt – the surface runoff from melting snow – is an essential water resource for communities and ecosystems. But extreme snow melt, which occurs when snow melts too rapidly over a short amount of time, can be destructive and deadly, causing floods, landslides and dam failures.
To better understand the processes that drive such rapid melting, researchers set out to map extreme snowmelt events over the last 30 years. Their findings are published in a new paper in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society.
"When we talk about snowmelt, people want to know the basic numbers, just like the weather, but no one has ever provided anything like that before. It's like if nobody told you the maximum and minimum temperature or record temperature in your city," said study co-author Xubin Zeng, director of the UArizona Climate Dynamics and Hydrometeorology Center and a professor of atmospheric sciences. "We are the first to create a map that characterizes snowmelt across the U.S. Now, people can talk about the record snowmelt events over each small area of 2.5 miles by 2.5 miles."
Read more at: University of Arizona
Photo Credit: grbaker via Pixabay
June 2021 Was the Hottest June on Record for U.S.
Nation has experienced 8 billion-dollar disasters so far this year
Stanford Researchers Show Sea-Level Rise May Worsen Existing Bay Area Inequities
Rather than waiting for certainty in sea-level rise projections, policymakers can plan now for future coastal flooding by addressing existing inequities among the most vulnerable communities in flood zones, according to Stanford research.
How Otters’ Muscles Enable Their Cold, Aquatic Life
Texas A&M researchers found that the small mammals are internally warmed by thermogenic leak from their skeletal muscle, which elevates their metabolic rate.
Space Lasers Map Meltwater Lakes
Satellites can “see” Antarctica’s surface deform as basins fill and empty on, within, and under the ice.