2015年1月27日 星期二

2015-01-28 Australia Science


Full-Time Whistle
   
Research Shows La Nina May Storm Through Twice As Often Thanks to Global ...   
Full-Time Whistle
Global warming may heavily increase the frequency and violence of climate phenomena known as La Nina and El Nino, which can result in intense weather patterns that affect the globe, a new study says. The immensely powerful La Nina storm system can ...

La Niña May Double with Climate Change   Tech Times
Global Warming May Double Risk of Extreme La Nina Event   University Herald
Extreme El Nino and La Nina events to increase in a warming world, researchers ...   Sydney Morning Herald
ABC Online   
Scientific American   
The Australian   
all 81 news articles »   


The Straits Times
   
Totten Glacier 'melting' with warmer ocean   
Yahoo!7 News
One of the world's biggest glaciers, holding enough water to raise global sea levels by about six metres, is under threat from warming ocean temperatures, researchers say. Satellite observations show that the Totten Glacier, located in Antarctica's Australian ...

Warming melting huge Antarctic glacier   Bangkok Post
Warm ocean melting East Antarctica's largest glacier   Yahoo News Canada

all 63 news articles »   


4 days until the election - party policies on the Great Barrier Reef   
ABC Online (blog)
The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) has released a reef policy scorecard which shows what policies each of the major parties has committed to protecting the Great Barrier Reef. Steve Austin spoke with Nick Heath who is the National Manager of Freshwater for ...


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NEWS.com.au
   
This is Australia's terrifying future   
NEWS.com.au
AUSTRALIA's two biggest science and weather bodies, CSIRO and the Bureau of Meteorology have released new climate change data and information on how it will affect Australia. “There is very high confidence that hot days will become more frequent and ...

Australia Is Heating Up Faster Than The Rest Of The World   Popular Science
Australian climate change worse than rest of the world: hot days to double by 2090   Australian Times
New climate change projection says Australia could warm by up to 5.1 degrees ...   ABC Online
Sydney Morning Herald   
BBC News   
The Australian   
all 92 news articles »   


ABC Science Online
   
Fossils push back snake origins by 65 million years   
ABC Science Online
Palaeontologists have described the four oldest-known fossils of snakes, the most ancient of which was a roughly 25-centimetre reptile called Eophis underwoodi that lived about 167 million years ago. The remarkable fossils from Britain, Portugal and the ...

Oldest snake fossils show they thrived in the age of dinosaurs   CBS News
Snakes Are 70 Million Years Older Than Previously Thought   Design & Trend
New fossils show that snakes are millions of years older than previously thought   National Monitor
Tech Times   
Full-Time Whistle   
Kelowna Capital News   
all 72 news articles »   


Washington Post
   
The News Matrix: Wednesday 28 January 2015   
The Independent
Scientists discover five new planets. Five Earth-sized planets have been discovered in an ancient solar system. Its parent star, named Kepler-444, is 117 light years from Earth and 11.2 billion years old. The five planets, ranging in size between Mercury and ...

Astronomers find oldest known star with Earth-like planets   DAWN.com
Australian astronomers help to find oldest known star   The Australian (blog)
Kepler discovered a system of 11-billion-year-old planets   Ars Technica
National Monitor   
Tech Times   
Voice of America   
all 194 news articles »   


UPI.com
   
Glow-in-the-dark algae turns Hong Kong harbor blue   
UPI.com
"Hong Kong and the entire Pearl River Delta has a big problem with wastewater, and that is surely a factor with these plankton blooms," David Baker said. By Brooks Hays | Jan. 27, 2015 at 1:00 PM. Comments 0 Comments. share with facebook. share with ...

Stunning blue hue as algae lights up Hong Kong harbor   CNN International
Sea Sparkle | The blue glow lighting up Hong Kong's water   NEWS.com.au
Hong Kong's toxic pollution creates gorgeous neon-blue algae blooms   SBS
Gizmodo Australia   
9news.com.au   
all 39 news articles »   


ENGINEERING.com
   
Scientists give graphene one more quality – magnetism   
Gizmag
Graphene is extremely strong for its weight, it's electrically and thermally conductive, and it's chemically stable ... but it isn't magnetic. Now, however, a team from the University of California, Riverside has succeeded in making it so. The resulting magnetized ...

Doping Graphene Easier Now with New Method   Tech Times
Non-Destructive, Reversible Method of Doping Graphene   AZoNano.com
Researchers at Penn, Berkeley and Illinois Use Oxides to Flip Graphene ...   Penn: Office of University Communications
Phys.Org   
Zee News   
Headlines & Global News   
all 29 news articles »   


Murray River drownings spark warning   
ABC Online
Authorities have issued a warning about the hidden dangers of swimming in the Murray River, after five drownings so far over summer. A spokeswoman for the Royal Life Saving Society, Amy Peden, said people continued to underestimate the dangers of ...


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Tech Times
   
Scientists Confirm That Shooting Stars Come from Comets   
Tech Times
New data gathered by the ESA's Rosetta spacecraft proves what scientists have long suspected: shooting stars are the result of active comets shedding dust as they get closer to the sun. (Photo : ESA/Rosetta). New data about Comet ...

Is Rosetta's comet falling apart?   RedOrbit
Hunt for Philae Hangs in the Balance   Scientific American
Comet might split in two after space probe finds huge crack in surface   9news.com.au
Space.com   
The Australian (blog)   
SatNews Publishers   
all 122 news articles »   

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