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Headlines: March 2003

  1. February 2003
  2. April 2003
  1. Weather Satellites Can be Better Used
    March 31, 2003

    Weather satellites could be even more effective forecasting and charting climate change if the agencies that run them keep up with the latest technology, an expert panel has reported. (New York Times)

  2. In Aftermath of Volcanic Eruption, Photosynthesis Waxes, Carbon Dioxide Wanes
    March 28, 2003

    Measurements taken during the years following the 1991 Mount Pinatubo eruption are providing new insight into how atmospheric aerosols affect photosynthesis. (Scientific American)

  3. Earthquake Warnings in Ionosphere?
    March 27, 2003

    Earthquakes may be sounding an early warning system in the outer reaches of the Earth?s atmosphere, says an international team of scientists. (Discovery Channel)

  4. Rising Clouds Leave Forests High and Dry
    March 26, 2003

    The base of clouds that form over the north-eastern states of the US have been getting ever higher over the past 30 years. (New Scientist)

  5. Geocryology Important Tool in Global Change Science
    March 25, 2003

    Geocryology, or the study of permafrost, is an increasingly important area of study in the larger field of global change science, Frederick E. Nelson, professor of geography at the University of Delaware, writes in the March 14 issue of Science magazine. (SpaceDaily)

  6. Carbon Storage in Northern Forests Linked to Fire
    March 24, 2003

    Researchers studying Canada's northern forests found that the ability of tree stands to store carbon changes as they regenerate from fire. (Environment News Service)

  7. East Coast Drought Is History
    March 22, 2003

    A snowy and rainy winter has pulled the East Coast out of its five-year drought, replenishing lakes and aquifers from Georgia to Maine. (CBS News)

  8. Lightning Adds to Ozone Level
    March 21, 2003

    Lightning can produce significant amounts of ozone and other gases that affect air chemistry, say researchers at Texas A&M University. (UPI, Cosmiverse)

  9. Sun's Output Increasing in Possible Trend Fueling Global Warming
    March 21, 2003

    In what could be the simplest explanation for one component of global warming, a new study shows the Sun's radiation has increased by .05 percent per decade since the late 1970s. (Space.com, MSNBC, Yahoo News)

  10. Greenhouse Gases May Be Shifting Wind, Rainfall
    March 19, 2003

    Greenhouse gas increases already blamed for global warming also may be shifting wind and rainfall patterns in the Northern Hemisphere by changing the atmospheric pressure, a new study suggests. (CTV Canada, Nature)

  11. Rising Clouds Leave Forests High and Dry
    March 19, 2003

    The base of clouds that form over the north-eastern states of the US have been getting ever higher over the past 30 years.

  12. Latest El Nino Wimps Out
    March 18, 2003

    The 2002-2003 El Nino was weaker than its record-setting predecessor in 1997-98, but it still had enough oomph to dump lots of snow in the East and dry out the West, scientists reported Tuesday. (UPI)

  13. 3 Great Lakes Frozen Over, First Time Since 1994: Environment Official
    March 13, 2003

    For the first time in nearly a decade, the surfaces of Lakes Erie, Huron and Superior are coated with ice, said an official with Canada's Ice Service department Thursday. (TerraDaily)

  14. Drought May Have Aided Fall of Maya Civilization
    March 13, 2003

    Decades of declining rainfall, marked by three serious droughts, may have played a key role in the collapse of the Maya civilization, a team of Swiss and American researchers said in a study published Thursday. (TerraDaily)

  15. Pinatubo Eruption Affected Arctic Climate
    March 12, 2003

    New research has linked the 1991 eruption of the Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines to a strengthening of a climate pattern called the Arctic Oscillation. (Environment News Service, ScienceDaily)

  16. Warmer Climate to Soak California
    March 11, 2003

    A warmer globe means a wetter winter for California punctuated by bigger storms more likely to flood valleys than blanket the Sierra Nevada in snow that is valuable to cities and farmers. (Tri-Valley Herald, Oakland Tribune, Environment News Service)

  17. Chemists Make Air Quality Discovery
    March 11, 2003

    Chemists find that the diesel and coal smoke that make East Coast air acidic also could be a major factor in another air-quality problem: fine-particle pollution. (Raleigh News & Observer)

  18. Greenland Cools as World Warms
    March 11, 2003

    While scientists report warming trends in many parts of the globe, it seems this northern polar region has been moving in the other direction. (BBC News)

  19. Rain Kills Reindeer
    March 10, 2003

    The reindeer, caribou and elk that many indigenous peoples depend upon starve when it rains on snow-covered land in Scandinavia, Canada, Alaska. (Nature)

  20. Changes in the Earth's Rotation Are in the Wind
    March 10, 2003

    Because of Earth's dynamic climate, winds and atmospheric pressure systems experience constant change and these fluctuations may affect how our planet rotates on its axis, according to NASA-funded research that used wind and satellite data. (SpaceDaily)

  21. Climate Changes May Increase Extreme Rain/Snow Events in California
    March 7, 2003

    Increasing carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere may lead to a rise in the number of annual extreme precipitation events in the Sierra Nevada Mountains, which in turn could increase the frequency of flooding in California, a NASA-funded study finds. (Environment News Service, ScienceDaily)

  22. Weak El Niño Means Less Snow in West
    March 7, 2003

    A new climate model shows that weak El Niños like the one this winter make for diminished snowfall in the Northwest and the Rockies into the spring. (Scripps Howard News Service, United Press International)

  23. El Niño Weakening, Experts Say
    March 6, 2003

    The El Niño that has helped bring unusual weather to parts of the country is weakening, federal climate experts said Thursday. (CNN)

  24. Changes in the Earth's Rotation Are in the Wind
    March 6, 2003

    Because of Earth's dynamic climate, winds and atmospheric pressure systems experience constant change that may affect how our planet rotates on its axis, according to NASA-funded research that used wind and satellite data. (ScienceDaily)

  25. Climate Studies Hold Key to Future of Desalination Plant
    March 6, 2003

    Paleontologists and hydrologists are being called in to help the US government decide what to do with a disused, $400-million desalination plant on the banks of the Colorado River. (Nature)

  26. Winter Weather Won't Replenish Great Lakes
    March 3, 2003

    Call it an irony of science, but the Great Lakes region - home of the world's largest collection of fresh surface water - remains entrenched in a drought. (Toledo Blade)

  27. Winter's Engine?
    March 1, 2003

    East Coast snow and cold may be powered by an Atlantic weather pattern called the North Atlantic Oscillation. (CNN)