The USGS National Wildlife Health Center investigates animal die-offs and threats to endangered species at its headquarters in Madison, Wisconsin.
Feb 03, 2012
The Unequal Effects of Climate Change
Poor, urban and minority residents are most at risk for health problems linked to climate change, according to a new analysis of Los Angeles and Fresno counties. Continue reading
Feb 02, 2012
Insurance Industry Awakening to Climate Risks
California will require all major insurers to survey and report climate risks. Continue reading
Feb 01, 2012
Snow Survey May Portend a Dry 2013
Skimpy Sierra snowpack may take a while to show up in water supplies. Continue reading
Blog | Feb 03, 2012
Life with the Leaf: 5 Tips to Beat Range Anxiety
Posted by Andrea Kissack
Five tips for easing range anxiety while driving an electric car.
Environment | Feb 03, 2012
The Bay Area's National Park Expands South
Posted by Amy Standen
The addition of Rancho Corral de Tierra is historic, "the largest land acquisition for Golden Gate National Recreation
Area pretty much since it began."
Geology | Feb 02, 2012
Geological Outings Around the Bay: Napa Glass Mountain
Posted by Andrew Alden
A Napa Valley roadcut was once a strategic resource center for the local inhabitants. Today it still draws visitors seeking
out that resource: obsidian.
Chemistry | Feb 01, 2012
Smitten Ice Cream: Old Fashioned Ice Cream in Sixty Seconds
Posted by Cat
When I have guests visiting, I make sure that one of the local stops is Smitten. The ice cream is made to order only using
the freshest local ingredients and it is frozen within 60 seconds using liquid nitrogen.
Engineering | Jan 27, 2012
Surgeons Seek Kid-Sized Tools for the Operating Room
Posted by Amy Standen
If you’ve ever spent time in Silicon Valley or among hi-tech entrepreneurs, you may have heard the term “Valley of Death.”
It’s used to describe the huge gulf that can exist between coming up with a new idea, and getting a product to market. Well,
this is a real problem in hospitals, too. Especially when it comes to kids.
Science
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Two Deaths: A Poet And A Beetle
Poet Wislawa Szymborska had an eye for the smallest, the gentlest, the hard-to-notice creatures on Earth and this week she bid them all adieu. Krulwich remembers Wislawa Szymborska.
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20 Million Years Later, Russians Work To Drill Into Lake
Russian researchers in Antarctica are on the verge of piercing a hole through two miles of ice into an ancient lake, untouched by the light of day for some 20 million years. But it'll be a delicate process to break through without disturbing the pristine waters. Guest host David Green speaks with Antarctic researcher John Priscu about the process.
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New USDA Map May Mean Earlier Planting In North
A new map from the USDA has some northern gardeners hoping to grow plants that used to be considered too fragile for cold weather zones. The hardiness zone chart is about a half zone warmer than the last one issued in 1990. The USDA says the changes are not due to global warming, but to more sophisticated mapping methods. Seed sellers and buyers say that, whatever the reason, the warmer temperatures expand possibilities for planting this spring.
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'Arctic Oscilliation' Behind Season's Mixed Winter Weather
For snow fans in the contiguous US, this winter has left much to be desired. The warm and mild season in the lower 48 and the wild snow dumps and cold weather up north in Alaska can be blamed largely on a weather pattern called "arctic oscillation." Audie Cornish gets an explanation of the weather phenomenon from meteorologist Jeffrey Masters.













