Por: CBS News Science October 19, 2022
A warming climate could bring viruses in the Arctic into contact with new environments and hosts, increasing the risk of viral spillover, according to research published Wednesday. Viruses need hosts like humans, animals, plants or fungi to replicate and spread, and occasionally they can jump to a new one that lacks immunity, as seen during the . wanted to investigate how might affect spillover risk by examining samples from the Arctic landscape... + full article
WPLG Local 10 USA Tech October 19, 2022
On a thermometer, a tenth of a degree seems tiny, barely noticeable. But small changes in average temperature can reverberate in a global climate to turn into big disasters as weather gets wilder and more extreme in a warmer world.In 2015, countries around the world agreed to... + más
Russia's climate is heating up faster than the rest of the world | Newsweek
Climate Questions: What's going on with climate change? | WPLG Local 10
Newsweek USA Tech October 17, 2022
Thanks to Earth-orbiting satellites and modern-day technology, scientists have been able to provide unequivocal evidence that the world is warming. But the concept of climate change has been known to humans for centuries.Climate change first became front-page news in 1988, after... + más
Voters likely swayed by media coverage on major issues: Politics expert | Newsweek
Yes, Climate Change Is Making Storms Like Hurricane Ian Worse | Time
The Boston Globe USA Opinion October 12, 2022
In 2005, I stood in front of the Lilliehook Glacier in Svalbard Bay, in the Svalbard archipelago in the Arctic Ocean; the same location my great-great-grandfather explored 100 years prior. The integrity of glaciers and ice caps I observed, compared to his photographs, presented... + más
Good Samaritan's over $1,000 gift to stranger stuns internet | Newsweek
World Bank fight against poverty fails to address climate impact, critics say | ABC News
Newsweek USA World October 11, 2022
Russia is experiencing a rise in temperatures at a faster rate than the world as a whole, Russian climate scientists said.It is well known that global temperatures are increasing due to climate change, with the rate of warming rising as time goes on. Earth's temperature has... + más
Your Home Heating Costs Are Going to Go Up This Winter—a Lot | Time
Our View: Heating prices leave Mainers anxious as winter approaches | Portland Press Herald
Newsweek USA World October 04, 2022
NATO does not expect Russia's costly war in Ukraine to prove a long-term distraction from Moscow's plan to dominate the Arctic, a senior alliance diplomat has said, as climate change opens new opportunities and poses new risks for the region.James Appathurai,... + más
Op-Ed: Russia's got a point: The U.S. broke a NATO promise | Los Angeles Times
U.S. Getting Ukraine to Finish Line Sets 'Tone' for China: Nikki Haley | Newsweek
Newsweek USA World September 27, 2022
An outbreak of Ebola disease in Uganda is a result of Sudan virus, the World Health Organization (WHO) has confirmed.Samples from a patient in the Mubende district of central Uganda tested positive for Sudan virus on September 20, and as of September 25, there have been 18... + más
Uganda confirms at least 1 case of Ebola hemorrhagic fever | Associated Press
Uganda confirms 7 Ebola cases, races to halt outbreak | ABC News
Newsweek USA Tech September 24, 2022
Scientists in China say they have managed to clone an Arctic wolf using a controversial method that some say could save species from extinction in the future.The cloned wolf was announced by Beijing-based company Sinogene Biotechnology on September 19, 100 days after it was born... + más
They Cloned Tyrone’s onto something wild in its first trailer | The Verge
When dog-sitting for an ex gets too complicated | The Boston Globe
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