Deforestation reducing monsoon rainfall in India – ‘That is really alarming’

By Shreya Dasgupta2 September 2016 (mongabay.com) – Around 80 percent of India’s annual rainfall comes from the Indian summer monsoon, spanning from June to September. But deforestation over the past few decades has caused summer monsoon to weaken, resulting in a considerable decline in rainfall, concludes the study published in Scientific Reports. “Monsoon is believed […]

Study maps hidden water pollution in U.S. coastal areas

8 August 2016 (NASA) – Coastal waters and near-shore groundwater supplies along more than a fifth of coastlines in the contiguous United States are vulnerable to contamination from previously hidden underground transfers of water between the oceans and land, finds a new study by researchers at The Ohio State University, Columbus, and NASA’s Jet Propulsion […]

Rainforest destruction in the Brazilian Amazon rises to rate not seen since 2009

By Rhett A. Butler3 September 2016 (mongabay.com) – Newly released data suggest that rainforest destruction in the Brazilian Amazon has reached the highest level since 2009. In the past week, Brazil’s National Space Research Institute (INPE) and Imazon, a Brazilian NGO, have independently released data from their near-real-time deforestation monitoring programs. Both show a steep […]

UN refugee agency: 2016 is deadliest year for refugees crossing to Europe via Central Mediterranean

2 September 2016 (UN) – The United Nations refugee agency today flagged that while the number of deaths of refugees seeking safety via the Turkey-Greece route into Europe has fallen dramatically, the use of the North Africa-Italy route has remained constant – with the latter experiencing an increase in the number of deaths, making 2016 […]

Sacred burial sites desecrated by Dakota Access pipeline construction – ‘This demolition is devastating’

By Levi Rickert3 September 2016 CANNON BALL, NORTH DAKOTA (Native News Online) – Sacred places containing ancient burial sites, places of prayer and other significant cultural artifacts of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe were destroyed Saturday by Energy Transfer Partners, Tribal Chairman David Archambault II said. “This demolition is devastating,” Archambault said. “These grounds are […]

Video: Hired Dakota Access oil pipeline security officers attack Native American protesters with dogs and pepper spray – ‘I saw dogs biting people indiscriminately’

4 September 2016 (ICTMN) –  On Saturday, 3 September 2016, water protectors from the Red Warrior Camp near the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation went to a construction site for the Dakota Access oil pipeline. There, they said, they were confronted by guard dogs and pepper spray, wielded by private security guards employed by Energy Transfer […]

New research uncovers warning signs for Neolithic population collapse

COLLEGE PARK, Maryland, 31 August 2016 (UMD) – Following the arrival of early agricultural crops from southwest Asia, ancient European societies experienced a series of population booms followed by a collapse that historical scientists are still working to explain. New research from the University of Maryland published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of […]

More than 48 children and 61,000 farm animals die in anomalous cold wave in Peruvian Andes – Cold to extend into northern forest

[Translation by Bing Translator.] 4 August 2016 (El Búho) – The situation is worrying in high altitude areas, due to enduring low temperatures. There are 300,000 hectares of natural pastures that have been damaged, which were intended to feed Alpaca livestock in these areas, and 18,735 head of cattle have died as a result of […]

Puget Sound has new climate refugees: white pelicans – ‘It’s like seeing aliens arrive’

By Katie Campbell29 August 2016 (KCTS9) – American white pelicans are conspicuous birds. With their long orange bills and their nine-foot wingspan, they stand out, even at a distance. Sue Ehler easily spots a squadron of them through her binoculars from over a mile away, coming in for a landing on Puget Sound’s Padilla Bay. […]

Designers propose memorial to shorelines past in Washington, D.C.

By Sara Peach2 September 2016 (Yale Climate Connections) – Sea level rise will have a significant impact on coastal communities as the world warms in the coming decades. But it happens too slowly to easily see. Now, designers Erik Jensen and Rebecca Sunter want to give people a tangible way to mark the change. They’ve […]

Social media & sharing icons powered by UltimatelySocial