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Tablet is World s Oldest Example of Applied Geometry
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The Outside/In[box]: Was The Origin Of Life A Singular Event?
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Over time, the photos help scientists keep track of changing coastlines. Council marine and coastal scientist Vikki Ambrose said the citizen science approach was a way for the council to monitor changes to the coastline that would otherwise be beyond the council’s scope, as it couldn’t feasibly have staff members gathering the same amount of data. “We can t be out looking all the time,” she said. “We’re asking the community, whenever they re passing one of these posts, just put their phone in and take a photo of the view.”
No matter the weather, the tide, or the time, Nelson council is calling for citizen scientists to take standard snapshots using their five new CoastSnap posts along the coast.
The new commemorative Alice In Wonderland coin that s been designed by a Welsh artist
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Clouds study finds that low climate sensitivity is ‘extremely unlikely’
It is “very likely” that the way clouds change as the world warms will drive further temperature rise, a new study finds.
The response of clouds to a change in global temperature – known as the “cloud feedback” – plays a crucial role in how much the planet will warm. However, estimates of cloud feedback are uncertain. The new study, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, uses global satellite observations to reduce this uncertainty.
Taking their findings into account, the authors produce a central estimate of equilibrium climate sensitivity (ECS) – the global temperature change resulting from a doubling of atmospheric CO2 – of 3.2C. They add that low ECS values below 2C are “extremely unlikely”.