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ScienceDaily: Earth & Climate News |
Lichens slow to return after wildfire Posted: 11 May 2021 09:36 AM PDT Lichen communities may take decades -- and in some cases up to a century -- to fully return to chaparral ecosystems after wildfire. |
Discovering candidate for reflex network of walking cats: Understanding animals with robots Posted: 11 May 2021 09:35 AM PDT A group of researchers developed a quadruped robot platform that can reproduce the neuromuscular dynamics of animals, discovering that a steady gait and experimental behaviors of walking cats emerged from the reflex circuit in walking experiments on this robot. |
Quantum mechanics paves the way for more stable organic solar cells Posted: 11 May 2021 09:35 AM PDT Quantum mechanics can be used to create more stable and more easily produced organic solar cells. |
Protecting local water has global benefits Posted: 11 May 2021 06:20 AM PDT A new article demonstrates why keeping local lakes and other waterbodies clean produces cost-effective benefits locally and globally. |
Hidden within African diamonds, a billion-plus years of deep-earth history Posted: 11 May 2021 05:12 AM PDT A team has come up with a way to solve two longstanding puzzles: the ages of individual fluid-bearing diamonds, and the chemistry of their parent material. The research has allowed them to sketch out geologic events going back more than a billion years -- a potential breakthrough not only in the study of diamonds, but of planetary evolution. |
Researchers develop magnetic thin film for spin-thermoelectric energy conversion Posted: 11 May 2021 05:11 AM PDT Engineers have proposed a satellite-aided drought monitoring method that can adequately represent the complex drought conditions into a single integrated drought index. |
The Aqueduct of Constantinople: Managing the longest water channel of the ancient world Posted: 11 May 2021 05:11 AM PDT Aqueducts are very impressive examples of the art of construction in the Roman Empire. Even today, they still provide us with new insights into aesthetic, practical, and technical aspects of construction and use. Scientists investigated the longest aqueduct of the time, the 426-kilometer-long Aqueduct of Valens supplying Constantinople, and revealed new insights into how this structure was maintained back in time. |
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