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Combining different stats reveals a picture of gun ownership in America that's more complete and accounts for movement from state-to-state, researchers say.
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BROOKLYN, New York, Thursday, April 22, 2021 - Rising sea levels and more powerful cyclonic storms, phenomena driven by the warming of oceans due to climate change, puts at immediate or potential risk an estimated 680 million people living in low-lying coastal zones (a number projected to reach more than
one billion by 2050). In nations like Bangladesh these populations are already moving to escape sea-level rise.
In a new study, Modeling human migration under environmental change: a case study of the effect of sea level rise in Bangladesh, researchers led by Maurizio Porfiri, an engineer at the Center for Urban Science and Progress (CUSP) at the NYU Tandon School of Engineering, apply data science to predict how the cascading effects of the migration in Bangladesh will ultimately affect 1.3 million people across the country by 2050. The work has implications for coastal populations worldwide.