A new study uses machine learning to project migration patterns resulting from sea-level rise. Researchers found the impact of rising oceans will ripple across the country, beyond coastal areas at …read more Source:: Science
Tag: rising
Antimicrobial resistance is drastically rising
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•Researchers have shown that antimicrobial-resistant infections are rapidly increasing in animals in low and middle income countries. They produced the first global of resistance rates, and identified regions where interventions …read more Source:: Science
Mortality rates rising for Gens X and Y too
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•Declining life expectancies in the US include Gen X and Y Americans, in addition to the older Baby Boomers. But the causes of premature mortality vary by race, gender and …read more Source:: Science
Why is sea level rising faster in some places along the US East Coast than others?
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•Sea levels are rising globally from ocean warming and melting of land ice, but the seas aren’t rising at the same rate everywhere. Sea levels have risen significantly faster in …read more Source:: Science
Scientists rethink co-evolution of marine life, oxygenated oceans
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•Researchers have confirmed that rising oceanic and atmospheric oxygen levels co-evolved with marine life hundreds of millions of years ago. …read more Source:: Science
Cutting greenhouse gas emissions would help spare cities worldwide from rising seas
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•Coastal cities worldwide would face a reduced threat from sea level rise if society reduced greenhouse gas emissions, with especially significant benefits for New York and other US East Coast …read more Source:: Science
Habitat loss seen as rising threat to world’s migratory birds
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•WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Habitat destruction along routes taken by the world’s migratory birds poses an increasing peril to these long-distance fliers, with a vast majority crossing terrain that nations are …read more Source:: UKScienceNews
Temperature’s rising: expert says dinosaurs were warm-blooded
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•WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Dinosaurs, those bygone masters of the planet, were warm-blooded just like today’s mammals, according to a scientist who judged their metabolism using body mass and growth rates …read more Source:: UKScienceNews