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Geotimes
December 2003
Megan Sever
Humans impact the climate, says AGU The American Geophysical Union (AGU) has adopted a new position statement on climate change that recognizes the increasing alteration of the Earth's climate by human activities. mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
May 2007
William B. Gail
Climate Control We will be able to engineer the Earth to our liking -- but we'd better start now. Before we picked a climate, we would need to evolve the political, commercial, and academic institutions to get us there. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
September 2006
Lee Gerhard
Testing Global Warming Hypotheses Global climate change has been a natural phenomenon driven by natural processes for 4.5 billion years. Nevertheless, cultural pressures exist to identify a human cause for current global climate change. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
November 2004
Naomi Lubick
Past warming for the future As the Bush administration prepares for a second term, only time will tell how its climate change policy will change in the next four years. In the meantime, discussions of the science behind climate changes abound in the journals and within the scientific community. mark for My Articles similar articles
Reason
October 2005
Sallie Baliunas
Full of Hot Air Book review: A climate alarmist takes on "criminals against humanity" in Boiling Point: How Politicians, Big Oil and Coal, Journalists and Activists Are Fueling the Climate Crisis -- And What We Can Do to Avert the Disaster, by Ross Gelbspan. mark for My Articles similar articles
Popular Mechanics
July 1, 2009
Andrew Moseman
5 Climate Studies That Don't Live Up to Their Hype A leading climate scientist argues that overbroad claims by some researchers -- coupled with overblown reporting in the media -- can undermine the public's understanding of climate issues. mark for My Articles similar articles
Scientific American
August 2009
David Appell
Stumbling Over Data: Mistakes Fuel Climate-Warming Skeptics Do minor errors erode public support on climate issues? mark for My Articles similar articles
Industrial Physicist
Aug/Sep 2004
Letters Reader feedback on Global warming... Spinning spheres... Hydrogen overflow... etc. mark for My Articles similar articles
ONLINE
Jan/Feb 2008
Stoss & Stoss
Heating Up for Global Warming Research and Policy The critical actions in combating global warming call for individuals, neighborhoods, communities, and geopolitical entities to implement a concept of global warming ICE. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
September 27, 2007
Simon Hadlington
Scientists Uncover How Last Ice Age Ended Scientists have shown that the end of the last age 19,000 years ago began in the higher latitudes of the southern hemisphere before sweeping into the tropics. mark for My Articles similar articles
Popular Mechanics
February 20, 2010
Tyghe Trimble
Do Climate Scientists Need to Be More Transparent? Scientists at AAAS 2010 talk about the need for better transparency in science, particularly for climate research. Here is what they have to say. mark for My Articles similar articles
Scientific American
April 2007
David Biello
Conservative Climate The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's consensus document may understate the climate change problem. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
May 2005
Naomi Lubick
Heat Imbalance Portends Problems Results from a new assessment show that Earth is absorbing more energy than it releases into space, with implications for climate change that researchers say point to future warming with consequences for melting ice sheets and sea-level rise. mark for My Articles similar articles
Industrial Physicist
Aug/Sep 2004
Forest, Webster & Reilly
Narrowing uncertainty in global climate change Unknowns hamper the initiation of climate-mitigation policies. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
December 2006
Top Climate News Stories of 2006 A new public face for climate change... Strong debate over storms... Thawing ice shifts water cycles... Methane climate menagerie... etc. mark for My Articles similar articles
Wired
June 23, 2008
Chris Mooney
Can a Million Tons of Sulfur Dioxide Combat Climate Change? Geoengineering may be the necessary step to save our planet. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
July 2006
Megan Sever
Climate Resolution A resolution on global warming, stating that the House of Representatives recognizes that warming is real and caused by excessive greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, reached the floor of the House, but was blocked from a vote. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
August 16, 2004
John Carey
Global Warming Consensus is growing among scientists, governments, and business that they must act fast to combat climate change. This has already sparked efforts to limit CO2 emissions. Many companies are now preparing for a carbon-constrained world. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
September 2005
Linda Rowan
Congressional Climate: Changing or Chilling? A flurry of discussions and compromises on aspects of the energy bill included a level of activity on climate change that has never been seen before in Congress, including a confrontation in the House on specific science results that has brought scientific peer review to the forefront of the debate. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
February 12, 2010
Ned Stafford
Belief in climate change plunges Recent polls suggest the public in the UK and US are becoming increasingly sceptical about climate change. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
September 2003
Megan Sever
Climate debate in the journals, on the Hill While few people disagree that Earth's surface has warmed over the past few decades, the arguments and accusations start flying when the discussion turns to whether or not the warming is an anomalous result of human activity or part of natural climate change. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
March 2007
Carolyn Gramling
Climate Report Points Finger at Fossil Fuels The world is warming, and the burning of fossil fuels is very likely to blame, according to a new report released by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
December 11, 2009
Andy Extance
'Climategate' resolution underlines concern over data falsification Politicians in the US are raising the pressure on chemists and other scientists to ensure their work's legitimacy following the publication of emails suggesting unethical research practices at the University of East Anglia. mark for My Articles similar articles
Science News
August 4, 2007
Julie J. Rehmeyer
Math Trek: Cloudy Crystal Balls Computer models may never be able to predict climate accurately. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
January 23, 2013
Chemical climate proxies With the climate change debate as heated as ever, how do scientists reconstruct what the weather was like in the past? Jon Evans looks at the detective chemistry behind such environmental forensic work mark for My Articles similar articles
Reason
November 2008
Letters Letters to the Editor: Carbon: tax, trade, or deregulate?... mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
August 2006
Megan Sever
From Hot to Cold in the Arctic For the first time, scientists have recovered direct evidence of what life in the Arctic has been like for the past 56 million years. A new 400-meter-long sediment core is revealing that all in the Arctic has not always been as it seems. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
July 21, 2009
Anna Lewcock
Degrees of freedom The global nature of the climate change offers both opportunities and challenges. The US, for example, is keen to establish international cooperation and collaboration in climate change research mark for My Articles similar articles
Outside
July 2007
Amanda Griscom Little
Brain Storm It's not nice to fool Mother Nature, but as the mercury rises, a crop of weather-changing scientists want to try. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
October 2005
Kathryn Hansen
Greenhouse Gases Revisited Scientists say now that a new method of tracking the effects of greenhouse gases could lead to a more accurate understanding of their impact on climate change, which other scientists say the Arctic is already experiencing on a dramatic scale. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
October 15, 2013
Jessica Cocker
Banned pollutants bite back A new study from scientists in Denmark and the UK says another worrying consequence of global temperature rises is that, as sea ice melts, banned pesticides are being reemitted into the open environment. mark for My Articles similar articles
Smithsonian
July 2006
Amy Crawford
Al Gore Discusses "An Inconvenient Truth" The former vice president and environmentalist talks about his new documentary film in which he travels the world presenting a slide show about global climate change. mark for My Articles similar articles
Reactive Reports
Issue 32
David Bradley
Climatic models A fundamental flaw in our models of global climate change has been exposed by Sallie Baliunas of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. mark for My Articles similar articles
Investment Advisor
June 2009
Robert F. Keane
The Green Advisor: More On Climate Change Climate change can present some healthy investment opportunities for your clients, even if you don't believe it's real. mark for My Articles similar articles
Science News
April 11, 2009
Michel Jarraud
Bracing For Global Climate Change Is A Local Challenge The secretary-general of the U.N. World Meteorological Organization discusses whether global climate change is real. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
June 2007
Fred Schwab
Plunging into the Debate on Climate Change Debate continues about whether the warming effects of greenhouse gases are overshadowed by natural events. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
October 2007
Moran & Backman
The Arctic Ocean: So Much We Still Don't Know In 2004, the Arctic Coring Expedition team took three ships to the Arctic to drill a core near the Lomonosov Ridge. The team's results are teaching us more than we ever knew about the past 65 million years in the Arctic. mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
January 26, 2001
Dawn MacKeen
Overwhelming evidence of global warming Experts hope a startling new report will be enough to persuade President Bush to take action... mark for My Articles similar articles
Industrial Physicist
Oct/Nov 2004
Letters Auto Fuels... Climate Sensitivity... Quantum Measurement... Corrections... mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
December 2005
Kevin E. Trenberth
A Warming World Climate change is with us; we cannot stop it, although we can slow it down. It behooves us therefore to track how and why the climate is changing. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
July 2004
Sara Pratt
Recalculating the Warming Trend Over the past 15 years climate researchers have observed that while temperatures at the earth's surface have been quickly on the rise, the troposphere has been warming more slowly than expected. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
August 2003
Megan Sever
Climate change report reexamined One of the more controversial topics of the Bush administration's revised strategic plan for climate change research is the ongoing debate of how anthropogenic factors factor into global climate change. Discussion at a meeting this week between government scientists and the NAS proved no different. mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
October 2008
Monica Heger
Q&A With: Ecologist and Geoengineering Expert Philip Boyd Ecologist Philip Boyd says we need to figure out the benefits and risks of geoengineering now mark for My Articles similar articles
Wired
February 25, 2008
Peter Schwartz
Humans Have Been Changing the Climate for Eons. That's Reason for Hope. Our epoch needs a new name. Scientists like Anthropocene to represent the era when people started messing up nature. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
April 2007
Mark Peplow
Editorial: Swindled? The bottom line is that just a few degrees increase in global average temperatures is likely to have a severe impact on human life. The silver lining of anthropogenic climate change is that, being man-made, at least we stand a chance of doing something about it. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
April 2005
Michael Glantz
What Makes Good Climates Go Bad? Climates are constantly changing in both linear and nonlinear ways and over the course of life on Earth, organisms have either adjusted to those changes or perished. mark for My Articles similar articles
Scientific American
October 2006
Jeffrey D. Sachs
Fiddling While the Planet Burns Will the Wall Street Journal's editorial writers accept a challenge to learn the truth about the science of global climate change? mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
December 2006
Megan Sever
Climate Policy -- Wading Into Heated Politics: Q&A with Gerald North An interview with National Academy of Sciences committee chair Gerald North about his experiences examining the hockey stick climate report, testifying about climate change before Congress, and about his thoughts on the climate policy debate. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
December 30, 2009
John Carey
Greenhouse Gases: Who's Cheating? The amounts of carbon in the atmosphere are out of whack with predictions and reported output. mark for My Articles similar articles
Popular Mechanics
May 1, 2009
Andrew Moseman
Ice Sculptures for Science: Chain Saws, Pickaxes, Methane Hydrates and Climate Change One of the greatest unknowns regarding the future pace of climate change involves a source of greenhouse gases we can't even see, let alone control. mark for My Articles similar articles