COCODRIE, La.-- Five million barrels of oil seems like a lot. That is approximately what spewed from the blowout at BP's Macondo well last year, about enough to fill an American football field more than 90 meters deep--and much of it has gone missing. [More]
Read More »Tag Archives: facebook
Feed SubscriptionOzone Hole May Have Caused Australian Floods
NEW YORK -- A new scientific study suggests that the severe flooding that hit northern Australia earlier this year may have not been caused by rising global temperatures induced by greenhouse gases, but rather by the hole in the ozone layer. Research published last week by scientists at Columbia University's School of Engineering and Applied Science, in conjunction with partners in Canada, purports to demonstrate how the massive hole in the ozone layer of the atmosphere high above Antarctica is altering rainfall patterns in the Southern Hemisphere. The study ran in Science magazine Friday
Read More »Lung-gevity: Longer U.S. Life Expectancy One Benefit of the 1970 Clean Air Act
Dear EarthTalk: Is air quality in the United States improving or getting worse? Is it cleaner in some parts of the country than in others?
Read More »Review: Playbook Shows Promise, But Fails to Deliver Apps
The BlackBerry PlayBook is a new 7-inch business tablet that shows promise.
Read More »Complete Rules of Entrepreneurship
Each day, Inc.'s reporters scour the Web for the most important and interesting news to entrepreneurs. Here's what we found today. Entrepreneurs, defined
Read More »Too Hard For Science? A Digital Panopticon
Collecting all digital data on people could yield key insights into our nature, but violate privacy In "Too Hard For Science?" I interview scientists about ideas they would love to explore that they don't think could be investigated.
Read More »Why can most people remember a color, but only a few can remember pitch?
Why can most people remember a color, but only a few can remember pitch? --David Hardie, Perth, Australia [More]
Read More »Life Is Complicated: Systems Biology Untangles Old Mysteries [Video]
For more than a century biologists made great strides in understanding the complex tapestry of life by tracing the smaller and shorter threads in its many patterns. This reductionist approach, which breaks complicated processes into their component parts to understand them better, has produced extraordinary advances. We take it for granted, for example, that DNA molecules--and not proteins--carry our genetic information, but that was a matter of huge debate and study in the early 20th century.
Read More »Dr. No Money: The Broken Science Funding System
Ever since Johannes Kepler traipsed over half of Europe wooing aristocratic patrons, scientists have grumbled about money.
Read More »Reading The Mind To Restore Speech
It may still sound futuristic, but the era of mind-controlled machines is here. An electrode is implanted in or sits on top of the brain, and records patterns of neurons firing; this pattern is then translated, via an algorithm, into computer language
Read More »Giant Energetic Bubbles Adorn The Milky Way
[More]
Read More »Coast Guard cites Transocean lapses in Gulf spill
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Serious safety lapses by oil rig owner and operator Transocean Ltd contributed to the massive blowout and spill at a BP Plc well in the Gulf of Mexico, the Coast Guard said in a report on the 2010 disaster.
Read More »Budget crunch mothballs telescopes built to search for alien signals
The hunt for extraterrestrial life just lost one of its best tools. The Allen Telescope Array (ATA), a field of radio dishes in rural northern California built to seek out transmissions from distant alien civilizations, has been shuttered, at least temporarily, as its operators scramble to find a way to continue to fund it.
Read More »What makes the luminous star known as Object X look so dim?
One might think that it would be hard to hide a star some 500,000 times more radiant than the sun, but distance and dust seem to have conspired to do just that.
Read More »When Cars Are Greener Than People
Hybrid cars have become so eco-friendly they now trump at least one form of human locomotion. [More]
Read More »