ScienceDaily: Earth Science News
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- Limits of microbial life in an undersea volcano: Third of Earth’s organisms live in rock and sediments
- Correlation between injection wells and small earthquakes discovered
- USGS science goes to Mars
- Ecology and phylogenetics together offer new views of Earth’s biodiversity
- Research links extreme summer heat events to global warming
Posted: 06 Aug 2012 12:12 PM PDT By some estimates, a third of the Earth’s organisms by mass live in our planet’s rocks and sediments, yet their lives and ecology are almost a complete mystery. Microbiologists have just revealed the first detailed data about a group of methane-exhaling microbes that live deep in the cracks of hot undersea volcanoes.
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Correlation between injection wells and small earthquakes discovered Posted: 06 Aug 2012 12:12 PM PDT Most earthquakes in the Barnett Shale region of north Texas occur within a few miles of one or more injection wells used to dispose of wastes associated with petroleum production such as hydraulic fracturing fluids, according to new research. None of the quakes identified in the two-year study were strong enough to pose a danger to the public.
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Posted: 06 Aug 2012 12:03 PM PDT With the Mars rover Curiosity’s successful landing Sunday, Aug. 5, at 10:32 p.m. PDT, U.S. Geological Survey scientists continue their strategic role in the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL), the most advanced mission yet to explore whether the Red Planet has ever offered environmental conditions favorable for microbial life.
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Ecology and phylogenetics together offer new views of Earth’s biodiversity Posted: 06 Aug 2012 10:08 AM PDT Scientists are taking a new look at Earth patterns, studying the biodiversity of yard plants in the US and that of desert mammals in Israel, studying where flowers and bees live on the Tibetan plateau and how willow trees in America’s Midwest make use of water.
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Research links extreme summer heat events to global warming Posted: 06 Aug 2012 10:05 AM PDT A new statistical analysis by NASA scientists has found that Earth’s land areas have become much more likely to experience an extreme summer heat wave than they were in the middle of the 20th century.
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