NOAA and others expect 2013 hurricane season to remain active

NOAA is still predicting that the 2013 Atlantic hurricane season will remain above average with 13-19 named storms.

Predicting zebra migrations from space

Using satellite rain and vegetation data, researchers track when and where arid lands begin to green, and anticipate if zebras will make the trek.

Claire Parkinson on geoengineering

Should scientists try to modify climate deliberately, in an attempt to cool the planet?

Unusual heat wave intensifies Siberian wildfires

A surge of fire activity in northern Siberia, caused in part by high temperatures.

First hundred thousand years of our universe

The farthest look back through time yet, thanks to a new analysis of the cosmic microwave background.

This date in science: Carl Ritter, one of first modern geographers, born

On August 7, 1779, Carl Ritter, considered one of the first modern geographers, was born.

Soil carbon blowing in the wind

Australian soils are losing about 1.6 million tons of carbon per year from wind erosion and dust storms affecting agricultural productivity, according to new research.

Is meat grown in labs the next logical step for food production?

Lab-grown meat might seem like a shake-up in the world of agriculture, but it's really part of the trajectory that agricultural technology is already following.

This date in science: The 1945 bombing of Hiroshima

Japan marked the 68th anniversary of the Hiroshima bombing earlier today with a somber ceremony

Drastically altered marine food web on the horizon

If current climate trends follow historical precedent, ocean ecosystems will be in state of flux for next 10,000 years, according to Scripps Oceanography researchers.

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