Rain increases ocean carbon absorption by 5% to 7% annually. This results in an extra 140 to 190 million tons of CO2 absorbed. Understanding rain's role is crucial for climate change models.
Researchers have found that rain improves the ocean's ability to sequester carbon dioxide, boosting its capacity by 5% to 7%. Their discovery changes not only our understanding of weather-related ...
The idea that it’s hard to improve on a classic isn’t really true. Let’s be honest—by modern standards, our classics are lacking in almost every area aside from styling. They don’t ...
(Reuters) - AT&T said on Monday it had struck a $1 billion multi-year deal with Corning to buy fiber, cable, and connectivity solutions, as the U.S. telecom giant looks to expand its high-speed ...
Rain has so far been ignored in calculations of the ocean's capacity to take up carbon, but a new estimate shows it enhances the ocean sink by 5% to 7%. Three decades ago, David Ho set up two pink ...
UN negotiations in Colombia have led to "excellent progress" towards creating a new process for identifying key marine biodiversity areas, in a move that observers consider essential for achieving ...
The carbon fiber submersible Titan imploded on a tourist trip to the wreck of the Titanic in June 2023, killing the five people on board, including OceanGate founder and CEO Stockton Rush. Although ...
The cradle-to-gate carbon footprint of the new solution, which considers value chain stages from raw materials extraction until the paperboard product leaves the mill, was also calculated and found to ...
A US Attorney's office is investigating the company behind the doomed expedition to the wreck of the Titanic, sources tell WIRED, even as a civil suit is already underway. WIRED could not confirm ...
The discovery of worms and snails confirms that these still-mysterious, dark hotspots of life extend beyond what’s visible above the crust Margherita Bassi Daily Correspondent A sample of ocean ...
A bleached coral is not dead, but ocean temperatures need to cool off for any hope of recovery. At least 14% of the world’s remaining corals were estimated to have died in the previous two ...