Earth

  1. Earth

    Flame retardants morph into dioxins

    Sunlight can break down common flame retardants, now nearly ubiquitous in the environment, into unusual chemicals in the dioxin family.

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  2. Earth

    Reused paper can be polluted

    Toxic chemicals can end up in recycled paper, making release of these reused materials into the environment potentially harmful.

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  3. Earth

    Going Down? Probe could ride to Earth’s core in a mass of molten iron

    A geophysicist suggests that scientists could explore Earth's inner structure by sending a grapefruit-size probe on a week-long mission to the Earth's core inside a crust-busting mass of molten iron.

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  4. Earth

    Patterns from Nowhere

    Scientists are developing geophysical models that may explain the polygonal patterns that appear in and on the ground in remote regions of the Arctic, Antarctica, and possibly the surface of Mars.

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  5. Earth

    Farm Harm: Ag chemicals may cause prostate cancer

    On-the-job exposure to certain agricultural chemicals may be responsible for farmers' high rates of prostate cancer.

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  6. Earth

    The Fires Below

    Underground coal fires help shape the landscape on many scales and in many ways, some transient and some long-lasting.

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  7. Earth

    Sensing a vibe

    A sprawling network of seismometers that covers the Los Angeles area could be adapted to provide warning of damaging ground motions from earthquakes in the seconds before those seismic vibes arrive.

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  8. Earth

    Cars’ ammonia may sabotage tailpipe gains

    Though cars' catalytic converters clean up some of the acidic contributors to urban haze and particulates pollution, a subset of these pollution-control devices seems to foster the production of ammonia, another pivotal ingredient in haze and particulates.

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  9. Earth

    Harbor waves yield secrets to analysis

    New findings by ocean scientists may help port officials in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, predict potentially destructive waves in the city's harbor.

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  10. Earth

    Seismic waves resolve continental debate

    New analyses of seismic waves that have traveled deep within Earth may answer a decades-old question about the thickness of the planet's continents.

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  11. Earth

    Feel the Heat: Rain forests may slow their growth in warmer world

    During a long-term research project in a Central American rain forest, mature trees grew more slowly in warm years than they did in cooler ones.

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  12. Earth

    Prenatal nicotine: A role in SIDS?

    New data suggest why exposure to nicotine in the womb can put an infant at greater risk of sudden infant death syndrome.

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