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Science Friday
:: Earth
Top Stories | November 8
  • Quakes far from tectonic plate boundaries may simply be aftershocks of ancient temblors.
  • The world-renowned ice caps could disappear by 2022, new research suggests.
  • Scorpionflies with long-reaching mouthparts may have helped plants procreate long before blossoms evolved.
  • There are 33 days until the opening of formal negotiations in Copenhagen on the next global climate-protection treaty. The hoped-for accord would take up where the current treaty leaves off. But to get some perspective on just where that is, a new United Nations report describes for negotiators and the public just how much the Kyoto Protocol has achieved. And real strides have been made in slowing the growth of greenhouse-gas emissions, thanks to many European nations (albeit with little help from North American ones or Japan).
  • A NASA model incorporates how atmospheric aerosols and greenhouse gases interact, yielding better estimates of the gases' warming and cooling effects.
:: More in Earth
A NASA model incorporates how atmospheric aerosols and greenhouse gases interact, yielding better estimates of the gases' warming and cooling effects.
An ancient fly discovered trapped in amber sports a horn atop its head and topped with three eyes.
Minerals still accumulate in New Mexico’s Snowy River.
At least in our area of the country, consumers are already being assaulted — well before Halloween — with Christmas music, decorations and holiday-themed goods. Reporters are smack in the throes of their own early seasonal blitz: News items carrying a climate or global-warming theme. And I don’t expect the crush of climate news and seminars to diminish until around Christmas. That’s when the next United Nations COP — or Conference of the Parties — will end this year’s pivotal round of negotiations in Copenhagen aimed at producing a new climate treaty.
A modern survey of terrain determines flow rate of the 1889 flood that was one of America's deadliest disasters.
:: Science News
11|7 Issue Links
Fossil analyses hint that several species thrived during the world’s largest mass extinction.