Showing Results for
- All Content Types
- Magazines (42)
Search Results
- 42
Magazines
- 42
- 1From:Earth Island Journal (Vol. 38, Issue 1)As an increasingly warming world alters the water cycle, scientists have been woefully short on tools to measure just how much water is available and where it is moving. That's about to change. A joint project between...
- 2From:Global Banking NewsGlobal Banking News-August 25, 2020-Eureka Resources wins US patent for removal of impurities oil and gas wastewater (C)2020 ENPublishing - http://www.enpublishing.co.uk Wastewater treatment company Eureka Resources...
- 3From:Earth Island Journal (Vol. 29, Issue 2)A "crisis" like the 2014 drought in California is a snapshot of humanity's long- term relationship with the hydrologic cycle, a finite and closed-loop system. The drought makes us ask hard questions: Are we working...
- 4From:Indian Life (Vol. 39, Issue 1)When I was a child, I worried about all the water running out of the rivers and into the oceans. First, I worried that the rivers would run out of water. Then, I worried that the oceans would fill up and flood over the...
- 5From:UN Chronicle (Vol. 55, Issue 1)An ecosystem is normally defined as a complex of all living (plants, animals, microorganisms) and non-living (soil, climate) components interacting *s as a functional unit in a certain area. Each contributes to...
- 6From:Popular Science (Vol. 289, Issue 4)MICROBES ARE EVERYWHERE--IN YOUR GUT, ON YOUR SKIN, EVEN IN THE sky. Along with water vapor and particles, clouds also contain living bacteria. And certain airborne species have a superpower: They can cause water to...
- 7From:Geographical (Vol. 73, Issue 6)QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS THE WATER WORKS Q: Is there a finite amount of water on the globe, or is it created during one of the weather-making processes? A: The amount of water on the globe is constant throughout...
- 8From:Journal of Himalayan Earth Sciences (Vol. 49, Issue 2)Byline: Muhammad Awais, Noor Jehan, Lawangin Sheikh, Laeiq Ahmad, Muhammad Aamir and Farhad Ullah Abstract Earth is a watery planet and about 71 percent of the total earth surface is covered by water. Major part...
- 9From:Feedstuffs (Vol. 85, Issue 14)How consumers and farmers interact within the hydrologic cycle is becoming more and more important, specifically as it relates to nutrient runoff and management. Ohio farm organizations and agribusiness concerns...
- 10From:Sky & Telescope (Vol. 118, Issue 5)Saturn's big moon Titan is the only known world that has something like Earth's hydrologic cycle: rainfall, leading to rivers that flow down to lakes and seas, where evaporation leads to new clouds that fall again as...
- 11From:National Geographic (Vol. 199, Issue 4)Unequal distribution, pollution, and competition limit access to fresh water It evaporates from the oceans, falls on the land, runs into the rivers, and flows back to the sea--water, a seemingly limitless resource....
- 12From:Booklist (Vol. 95, Issue 7)Science Court: The Water Cycle. Tom Snyder Productions. 1997. Win/Mac. $59.95. 536 Hydrologic cycle || Water Gr. 4-8. Based on the popular television series of the same name, this disc teaches students about...
- 13From:American City & County (Vol. 123, Issue 1)Climate change will lead to drought in some parts of the country and floods in other areas, according to a report by the Washington-based Association of Metropolitan Water Agencies (AMWA) released last month. In...
- 14From:World Watch (Vol. 18, Issue 6)The large-scale conversion of natural landscapes to agriculture and other human uses is a leading threat to human health and global sustainability, researchers reported in the July 22 issue of Science. The authors...
- 15From:Parks & Recreation (Vol. 48, Issue 7)Home to two major rivers and a vast network of creeks and streams, the City of Philadelphia is also one of the nation's most urbanized cities. Over the past century, many of Philadelphia's creeks and streams have been...
- 16From:Mother Earth NewsThe prognosis for climate change in the U.S. in the 21st century looks pretty hot--but don't rush to the beach. The temperature in this country could rise anywhere from 5 [degrees] to 10 [degrees] Fahrenheit in the...
- 17From:National Geographic Explorer: Pioneer (Vol. 9, Issue 6)Picture a drop of water. Where does it come from? Where is it going? The answers might surprise you. Earth's water is always on the move. It travels from the oceans to the sky. It falls from clouds and fills streams,...
- 18From:Science World (Vol. 64, Issue 8)What do the oceans and atmosphere have in common. Both are vital to Earth s water cycle, or the continuous process by which water moves from Earth's surface to the atmosphere and back Look at the diagram of the water...
- 19From:UNESCO Courier (Vol. 38, Issue 1)Nature's water wheel OUR earth has been called the Water Planet, and with good reason. If it were not for the pervading presence of water on earth, the life forms that we know simply would not be here. Some very...
- 20From:Astronomy (Vol. 44, Issue 1)Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko is an active place, as the European Space Agency's Rosetta spacecraft has shown over the last year and a half. Most recently, scientists announced September 23 in Nature that the comet...