Stanford EarthOvjeren akaunt

@StanfordEarth

The Stanford School of Earth, Energy & Environmental Sciences develops the knowledge, talent and leadership to understand and help solve challenges facing Earth

Stanford, CA United States
Vrijeme pridruživanja: svibanj 2013.

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  1. In the sea, many habitats move around, like the positions of ocean fronts and currents. Marine ecologist Larry Crowder discusses how ocean sanctuaries whose boundaries can shift can better protect species under climate change.

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  2. “We are experiencing the impacts of global warming unfolding literally in real time,” Noah Diffenbaugh tells . “People and ecosystems are being impacted across the world, from the equator to the poles, from both in the ocean and on land.”

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  3. Congrats to Jessica Watkins, BS ‘10, who graduated from NASA’s Astronaut Class on Jan. 10, 2020. She is one of five female graduates, any of whom may go on to become the first woman on Mars. “‘Sign me up,’ as long as there’s a ride back,” she said.

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  4. "It's a decade when our understanding of climate change has grown in many ways," Noah Diffenbaugh tells . "In many cases, we're seeing a pervasive human fingerprint on extreme (weather) events."

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  5. "What we see clearly is that the odds that different regions around the world experience warm and dry conditions simultaneously has already increased substantially as a result of the 1 degree of warming we've already had," Noah Diffenbaugh tells .

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  6. Paul Segall’s work on the Kīlauea Caldera was cited in . Read more here:

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  7. One way to reduce wildfires? Set more fires. Learn more about how prescribed burns can help to offer solutions for wildfire-ravaged landscapes.

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  8. “Particulate pollution from coal still kills thousands of Americans yearly and hundreds of thousands of people worldwide,” Rob Jackson tells . “Rolling back emissions standards won’t just harm the climate, it will kill people.”

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  9. On Jan. 29, Stanford Earth hosted in the Geosciences, featuring speaker Robbie Gries, the 2019 president of . The event set the stage for conversations on strategies for recognizing/responding to harassment, particularly in geosciences.

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  10. With recent wildfires tearing across Australia, Kevin Arrigo, Gabrielle Wong-Parodi, and PhD student Rebecca Miller spoke with the about their perspective on the situation. Read about it here:

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  11. “It is an unusually hot year in Australia and an unusually dry year,” Chris Field tells . “But the amount of warming that was required to transition from an ordinary serious year to a devastating one is not very much.”

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  12. Why do some planets eat their own skies? How can setting more fires help our fire problem? Find out the answers to these questions and more in the latest Stanford Earth Matters newsletter.

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  13. Photos by Nathan Dadap, Yuran Zang, Malcolm Hodgskiss, and others were featured in a Stanford News article highlighting the work of Stanford researchers in the field. See their photos here:

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  14. Research by Kevin Arrigo, Dusty Schroeder, Jim Leape, and Miyuki Hino was featured in Stanford News’ 2019 roundup of high-tech ocean solutions work. Read more here:

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  15. Are the trade-offs worth it? Inês Azevedo co-authored an op-ed in which explores the impacts of natural gas extraction from the Appalachian Basin.

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  16. “The damages from air pollution provided by farms are larger than the marginal value that the farms provide in economic terms,” Inês Azevedo tells . "So we'll need to think about the sector more seriously.”

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  17. “The best we can say for 2019 is that global carbon dioxide emissions rose ‘only’ 0.6 percent,” Rob Jackson writes in an op-ed for . “But growth is growth, and another year and another decade have been lost to record emissions.”

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  18. As the world warms and precipitation that would have generated snowpack instead creates rain, the western U.S. could see larger floods, according to new Stanford research.

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  19. “Not only have the emissions decreased, but the damages—the health damages—from those emissions have decreased very rapidly, more than 20% over the course of six years,” Inês Azevedo tells .

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  20. Congrats to Jessica Watkins, Geological and Environmental Sciences BS ‘10, who graduated from ’s Astronaut Class on Jan. 10, 2020. She is one of five female graduates, any of whom may go on to become the first woman to step foot on Mars.

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