Environment

  1. Earth

    Rocks hold clues to ancient die-offs

    Rocks that formed during ancient mass-extinction show that the oceans back then had become very warm. That was the last time Earth spewed carbon dioxide into its atmosphere at a rate similar to what is happening today.

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  2. Agriculture

    Building better, safer soils

    Engineering safer soils for urban growers can reduce the risk of lead exposure and let low-income families enjoy more fresh fruits and vegetables.

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  3. Science & Society

    The most important stories of 2015

    From Pluto to gene editing, the year saw a number of notable research discoveries, advances and insights.

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  4. Environment

    Water: Getting the salt out

    A new water-cleansing technology passes electricity through a flow of salty water. This will generate a zone of fresh water that can then be collected.

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  5. Tech

    Engineers consider liquid salt to generate power

    A new type of power plant, a molten salt reactor, might provide electricity in a cleaner and safer way than current nuclear technology.

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  6. Chemistry

    Some 3-D printing can leave toxic taint

    The ”ink” inside some 3-D printers can leave toxic traces. In tests, these chemicals harmed baby fish. But lighting could render the parts safer.

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  7. Genetics

    Taking attendance with eDNA

    Environmental DNA, or eDNA, tells biologists what species are in an area — even when they’re out of sight.

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  8. Environment

    Wildlife forensics turns to eDNA

    Environmental DNA, or eDNA, tells biologists what species have been around — even when they’re out of sight or have temporarily moved on.

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  9. Animals

    Kangaroo farts: Not so ‘green’ after all?

    Scientists had thought that kangaroo farts were environmentally friendly because they had little methane. That may not always be true.

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  10. Environment

    Mealworms chow down on plastic

    Gut bacteria in mealworms break down polystyrene. Feeding plastic to the worms, or the germs they carry, could be a way to get rid of these wastes.

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  11. Environment

    Stuffy classrooms may lower test scores

    New research links fresh air in classrooms to test scores. Elementary-school students in stuffy classrooms, it found, may perform worse on standardized tests.

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  12. Agriculture

    ‘Wildlife-free’ farms don’t make salads safer

    Scientists find that removing wildlife from farms did not make raw vegetables safer to eat.

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