What On Earth
- March 2010
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Here is the list of entries for What On Earth based on the selected criteria.
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Even in Science, There's More than One Side to Every Story
Mar 26, 2010 01:37:34 PM | Adam Voiland
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- Every tale has more than one side or perspective. And so it is with NASA, which studies Earth science from different angles – from satellites, from aircraft, and sometimes from the ground. But somehow, no matter how many ways there are to view a place, there’s nothing better than being there.
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Working (Very) Remotely
Apr 01, 2010 07:57:20 AM | NASA Earth Science News Team
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- Making sure satellite measurements are accurate sometimes requires going a little out of the way.
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A Revolutionary Way to Observe Earth
Mar 16, 2010 02:09:10 PM | Adam Voiland
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- Science tends to be a conservative profession. Only rarely are "discoveries" made or paradigms upended as most researchers spend entire careers working toward incremental advances in understanding rather than dreaming up radical new ways to tackle a problem.
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Flying high with NASA's Joanne Simpson
Mar 12, 2010 05:27:21 PM | Adam Voiland
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- Joanne Simpson, the first woman to earn a PhD in meteorology, didn’t just break into a field where women weren’t welcome.
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Making a Splash with Satellite Hydrology
Mar 10, 2010 08:44:09 AM | Kathryn Hansen
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- Faisal Hossain and his research group -- largely funded by NASA grants -- work to improve the ability of developing nations to monitor water resources that cross national boundaries.
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A Closer Look at Dust
Mar 08, 2010 02:12:47 PM | Adam Voiland
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- Each summer, sandstorms lift millions of tons of dust from the Sahara, carrying it off the West Coast of Africa and over the Atlantic Ocean.
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NASA Readies for Spring 2010 Ice Bridge Campaign
Mar 07, 2010 07:45:33 AM | Adam Voiland
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- Scientists are returning to the Arctic this spring as part of the six-year Operation Ice Bridge mission -- the largest airborne survey of Earth's polar ice ever flown.
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