NASA map excites researchers The Jet Propulsion Laboratory reported today that: NASA-funded researchers have created the first complete map of the speed and direction of ice flow in Antarctica. The map, which shows glaciers flowing thousands of miles from the continent’s deep interior to its coast, will be critical for tracking future sea-level increases from [...]
Categories: Climate change,Environment,Science
Tagged: Alan Buis, animated map, animation, B. Scheuchl, E. Rignot, glaciers, glaciology, Ice Flow of the Antarctic Ice Sheet, Irvine, J. Mouginot, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, JPL, map, polar region, satellite, satellite tracks, sea level, Steve Cole, tracks, University of California
- Published:
- 18 August 2011 – 16:59
- Author:
- By BrainiYak
Here’s an example of the unedited, time-wasting crap that lesser-ranked journals often print Blather seems to characterize our world. When intellectually incoherent blather slops over into what is supposed to be science, I’m irritated. Here is an example of scientific incoherence that left me wondering what the (apparently obtuse) people who wrote it are like [...]
Categories: Uncategorized
Tagged: Corie N. Radka, David A. Cleveland, Effect of Localizing Fruit and Vegetable Consumption, fruit, greenhouse gas emissions, Hannah Van M. Wright, localized agriculture, Nicole J. Rekstein, non sequitur, Nora M. Mller, Sydney E. Hollingshead, Tyler D. Watson, UC Santa Barbara, University of California, vegetables
- Published:
- 21 May 2011 – 21:44
- Author:
- By BrainiYak