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Headlines: July 2000

  1. June 2000
  2. August 2000
  1. Transpacific Pollution's Thick Trail
    July 31, 2000

    Researchers say that Asia's expanding industrialization is discharging millions of tons of contaminants that travel across the Pacific Ocean and could alter global climate. (Sylvia Wright, Environmental News Network)

  2. Warmer Tropical Ocean Temps Alarm Scientists
    July 30, 2000

    Researchers have found tropical waters in the Southern Hemisphere have cooled slightly, but Northern Hemisphere waters have warmed, endangering coral reefs. (Curt Suplee, The Washington Post)

  3. Remote Sensing May Help Unlock Earth's Mysteries
    July 29, 2000

    More than 1,200 scientists gathered in Hawaii this week for the International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium to understand how remote sensing can take the pulse of the Earth. (Helen Altonn, The Honolulu Star-Bulletin)

  4. A Hot Blast of Cold Weather
    July 28, 2000

    Scientists believe that a hot blast of solar particles may have a paradoxical effect on the atmosphere, actually cooling the Earth. (Discover)

  5. New and Potent Greenhouse Gas Identified
    July 28, 2000

    Scientists have found rising concentrations of a newly identified gas in the air that traps heat more effectively than other gasses, and may be warming the global climate. (Andrew C. Revkin, The New York Times)

  6. Global Warming Affects Birds' Biological Clock
    July 27, 2000

    Researchers in Scotland find that avian breeding may depend on springtime temperatures. (Environmental News Network)

  7. Landsat 7 Satellite to Monitor Lakes
    July 23, 2000

    Landsat 7 will observe various lakes in Wisconsin this summer to get a better measure of their clarity. (Meg Jones, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel)

  8. Greenland is Skating on Thinner Ice
    July 21, 2000

    The massive Greeland ice sheet is melting, accounting for a 7 percent rise in oceans worldwide. (Curt Suplee, The Washington Post and Associated Press)

  9. Global Warming Threatens Health
    July 18, 2000

    Climate change could bring more weather disasters which could lead to a wide range of health risks. (Seattle Times)

  10. Scientists Suspect Undersea Landslide in New Guinea Tsnumai
    July 18, 2000

    An undersea earthquake likely caused a landslide that triggered a tsnumai, researchers believe. The tidal wave killed 2,000 in New Guinea two years ago. (Bruce Dunford, Associated Press)

  11. Climate Change, Population Threaten Water Resources
    July 17, 2000

    Researchers have concluded that population growth and global climate change will adversely impact the availability of water over the next 25 years. (Environmental News Network)

  12. Diary of a Cloud Hunter
    July 15, 2000

    Cloud scientists took to the air in Oklahoma this spring to try to solve a debate about whether or not clouds are absorbing more sunlight than physics can predict. (Stephen Cole, New Scientist )

  13. U.S. Drought Devastates Farmers in Deep South
    July 15, 2000

    The drought continues for a third year in the southeastern United States, with rainfall amounts 20 inches and more below normal in some areas. (Reuters)

  14. Study Faults Humans for Large Share of Global Warming
    July 14, 2000

    A recent study concluded that human activities account for 75 percent of atmospheric warming since 1900. (Andrew C. Revkin, The New York Times)

  15. Tidal Waves Called Threat to East Coast
    July 13, 2000

    Pressurized water trapped between sediments off the Mid-Atlantic coast could escape and cause undersea landslides that may produce tidal waves. (Andrew C. Revkin The New York Times; Lee Bowman, Scripps Howard News Service; USA Today)

  16. Eruption on Sun Triggers Radio Blackouts
    July 12, 2000

    A strong solar flare bringing electromagnetic energy to Earth this week may create mid-latitudinal aurora lights and disrupt radio broadcasts. (Associated Press)

  17. Research Predicts Summer Doom for Northern Ice Cap
    July 11, 2000

    Norwegian scientists say the retreating ice cap over the North Pole could disappear each summer beginning in 50 years. (Walter Gibbs, The New York Times)

  18. Scientists Read Leaves for Clues to Greenhouse Effect
    July 11, 2000

    Researchers find carbon dioxide spurs plant growth, reduces the nutritional value of leaves, and affects the food chain. (David Poulson, Newhouse News Service)

  19. For 500 Million, a Sleeper on Greeland's Ice Sheet
    July 10, 2000

    Greenland's changing climate and ice sheet are key factors in the weather affecting half a billion people in North America and Europe. (Curt Suplee, The Washington Post)

  20. Cities May Make Their Own Weather
    July 9, 2000

    New research suggests that the "urban heat islands" caused by large cities can actually create weather and affect areas hundreds of miles away. (Erin McClam, Associated Press)

  21. Plants Get Sunburned Too
    July 5, 2000

    Researchers discovered that excessive ultraviolet radiation from the sun's rays damage the DNA in plants. Research suggests that the depletion of the ozone layer could have a measureable impact on the mutation of plants. (Reuters)

  22. "Lost Rivet" Metaphor Describes Ecosystem Decline
    July 4, 2000

    Development, agriculture, and logging continue to destroy and degrade natural habitats, and fewer species now populate the world. Scientists say that each loss is like a lost rivet holding the environment together. (William K. Stevens, The New York Times)

  23. Predicting Flows of Volcanic Ash
    July 1, 2000

    Scientists are developing ways to better predict volcanic mudflows. They are using satellite imagery of surface temperatures and vegetation, topography, and computer models to reconstruct previous lahar flows to enhance their predictions for future flows. (Sarah Simpson, Scientific American)