Critical Infrastructure Is Sinking Along the US East Coast
Below is New York’s JFK Airport—notice the red hotspots of high subsidence against the teal of more mild elevation change.
Read moreBelow is New York’s JFK Airport—notice the red hotspots of high subsidence against the teal of more mild elevation change.
Read moreMary Yap has spent the last year and a half trying to get farmers to fall in love with basalt.
Read moreEarlier this month, one corner of the internet got a little bit greener, thanks to a first-of-its-kind geothermal operation in
Read more“Some have thoughts that the systems are linked at depth,” says Edward Marshall, a geochemist at the University of Iceland—either
Read moreFew people on Earth have reached closer to its center than Buzz Speyrer, a drilling engineer with a long career
Read moreAdd up the million or so buildings in New York City, and you get something on the order of 1.7
Read morebecause of the promising conditions in Starr and Hidalgo Counties, Jamie had been helping a handful of people there. The
Read moreClimate scientists already know that the East Coast of the United States could see around a foot of sea-level rise by
Read moreLeaving the cultivated hillsides of the village, we crossed the park border and soon entered tropical forest, where jewel-like flowers
Read moreLeaf waxes also predate climate records from Antarctic ice cores, which go back only about a million years and require a
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