Beyond your doorstep: What you buy and where you live shapes land-use footprint
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In recent years, the attention of scientists and environmentalists has turned toward how population growth and urban expansion are driving habitat loss and an associated decline in ecosystem productivity and biodiversity. But the space people directly occupy is only one part of the land-use puzzle, according to new research.
We’re taking coronavirus seriously. What if we did that with climate change?
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There are a lot of parallels between the coronavirus and climate change. Both are existential threats that are directly affected by individual choices and actions but need coordinated, global action to slow them down. Both will hurt or kill the most vulnerable people.
Greenland’s melting ice raised global sea level by 2.2mm in two months
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Analysis of satellite data reveals astounding loss of 600bn tons of ice last summer as Arctic experienced hottest year on record.
The Mediterranean nearly dried up. A cataclysmic flood revived it.
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The serene turquoise waters of the Mediterranean Sea hide a sharp-tasting secret: a layer of salt up to two miles thick, lurking deep underneath the basin. Even after decades of study, the details surrounding the sea’s vanishing act and the torrents of water that refilled the basin remain an enduring mystery.
New approach to sustainable building takes shape in Boston
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A new building about to take shape in Boston’s Roxbury area could, its designers hope, herald a new way of building residential structures in cities.
This winter in Europe was hottest on record by far, say scientists
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This winter has been by far the hottest recorded in Europe, scientists have announced, with the climate crisis likely to have supercharged the heat. The EU’s Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) data dates back to 1855.
Half of the world’s beaches could disappear by the end of the century, study finds
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Climate change poses an existential threat to the world’s sandy beaches, and that as many as half of them could disappear by the end of the century, a new study has found. The study was published Monday in the scientific Journal Nature Climate Change and was conducted by scientists from the European Commission’s Joint Research Center, as well as universities in Spain, Portugal and the Netherlands.
As Gulf swallows Louisiana island, displaced tribe fears the future
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Isle de Jean Charles, Louisiana. Photo source: ©© Maitri Excerpts; It’s all but assumed Isle de Jean Charles will one day disappear beneath the waves… Read Full Article; MSN (02-27-2020) Resettling the First American Climate Refugees – Louisiana; The New York Times (05-03-2016) The Isle de Jean Charles resettlement plan is one of the first […]
As SC island homes fall into ocean, owners behind them wonder if they’re next
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This small slip of land on the eastern tip of Beaufort County is the legacy of an opportunistic time when a wave of businessmen descended on the South Carolina coast keen-eyed for fragments of paradise to package and sell off.