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Viewing Posts from October 2016

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    Kigali: A Huge Step Forward for Climate

    The Antarctic ozone hole in 2016 was not exactly remarkable. But each year, we publish an annual update because, when strung together over time, the series shows the unparalleled success of the Montreal Protocol in stabilizing the atmosphere. Now the scientists and negotiators behind the Protocol are taking on a new problem: the climate warming […]

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    October 2016 Puzzler

    Every month on Earth Matters, we offer a puzzling satellite image. The October 2016 puzzler is above. Your challenge is to use the comments section to tell us what part of the world we are looking at, when the image was acquired, what the image shows, and why the scene is interesting. How to answer. Your answer can be […]

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    September 2016 was Warmest on Record by Narrow Margin

    September 2016 was the warmest September in 136 years of modern record-keeping, according to a monthly analysis of global temperatures by scientists at NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) in New York. September 2016’s temperature was a razor-thin 0.004 degrees Celsius warmer than the previous warmest September in 2014. The margin is so narrow […]

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    Hurricane Roundup: Matthew from Above

    After Hurricane Matthew ripped through Haiti, it blew through the Southeast. From above, NASA satellites, aircraft, and astronauts kept watch on the storm. The Earth Observatory published several images of the destructive storm (thumbnails above). The below includes a sampling of other notable images and maps related to the storm. Soil Moisture Matthew drenched the […]

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    The Language of Science: Do’s and Don’ts of Extreme Rainfall

    In the United States, we say “it’s raining cats and dogs” when we get a heavy downpour. In South Africa, it rains “women with clubs.” In Slovakia, a good soak means “tractors are falling.” World languages brim with rainy day idioms. But when it comes to describing copious amounts of wet stuff, meteorologists do not […]

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