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Bigger and more intense storms as the result of climate change, and erosion and flooding caused by the power of water, may not always be easy for people to visualize.Using a device known as Stream Table 101, eighth graders at Amherst Regional Middle.
HOPE SPRINGS ETERNAL, as the saying goes, and that was especially true this warm and sunny Thursday, after the separate announcements by President Joe Biden and Gov. Chris Sununu one year into this pandemic.
President Biden cautioned that we as Americans must do our part by getting vaccinated and not prematurely abandoning mask wearing, social distancing and other measures that stem the spread of the virus.
Meanwhile, Gov. Sununu announced Thursday he is relaxing some of the Granite Stateâs restrictions, including allowing retail stores to again operate at full capacity and no longer requiring travelers arriving in the state to quarantine.
Free meal or attend class? School schedules force some low-income families to choose
By Naomi Martin Globe Staff,Updated December 15, 2020, 9:22 a.m.
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The race against the clock starts at 10:50 a.m., when the second-grade Zoom class goes on a lunch break.
Rebecca Wood, a single mother who doesnât have a car, and her daughter, Charlie, have precisely 40 minutes to walk to Charlieâs school in Revere, wait in line, pick up food for the next few days, and rush home to scarf down the meal â usually nachos, pizza, or chicken nuggets, with carrots and fruit â before class starts again. Charlie is sometimes late to log back on, but itâs the only way the family can get the crucial free meals, which are distributed from 10:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. every Tuesday and Friday.
UMass Amherst researchers celebrate years of restoration and a green exit strategy for farmers
December 15, 2020
Christine Hatch and Glorianna Davenport of the Living Observatory dig for a broken fiber optic cable in the newly constructed microtopography. Foothills Preserve, Plymouth, Mass. Photo courtesy: Ricard Torres-Mateluna/Hatch lab
Students Alyssa Chase, Jeron LeBlanc and Lyn Watts measure soil moisture along a transect above fiber optic cables at Foothills Preserve, Plymouth, Mass. Photo courtesy: UMass Amherst/Hatch lab
AMHERST, Mass. – As the Massachusetts Division of Ecological Restoration’s Cranberry Bog Program released its report this month recounting a decade of restoring former cranberry bogs to wetlands, project research hydrogeologist Christine Hatch and her University of Massachusetts Amherst students are poised to continue collecting data and monitoring the “re-wilded” ecosystems’ progress for years to come.