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Author: Travis Swaim

Fishnet updated

They now offer beer and wine. The "happy hour" drink deals are decent (e.g., $4 for a glass of the drinkable house wine). The place still lacks an atmosphere, though, and the place echoes which can be annoying if there happen to be screaming kids around (it's a family-friendly place). There are picnic tables outside, so you can escape the noise if you need to. Wouldn't say I'd haunt the place, but a "pop in" now and then is …

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Climate Change Weekly Roundup 8/19/14

Publication: Washington Post Author: Joby Warrick Date: August 17, 2014 Title: West’s historic drought stokes fears of water crisis With no rain relief in the winter for the past three years, California’s farmers are struggling to keep their crops from drying up. According to a study posted in the end of July this year, California’s drought conditions will cause a 6.6 million acre-foot reduction in surface water available for agriculture, only partially replaced by increasing …

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Mississippi River Delta Project: Finding Ways to Maximize Land and Water

When it comes to policy questions regarding land use, sometimes a little science is required to evaluate the effects on the land and the costs for developers. For Dr. Melissa Kenney and her colleagues, their research on the Mississippi River Delta will help influence future state-planned land development in the region through its examination of options that are cost-effective and environmentally conscious. “The Mississippi River Delta is a really critical ecosystem and social system, and …

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Climate Change Weekly Roundup: 08/13/14

Publication: Washington Post Author: Terrence McCoy Date: August 5, 2014 Title: Scientists may have cracked the giant Siberian crater mystery — and the news isn’t good Scientists now theorize that methane explosions within the melting permafrost created the new craters in Siberia, but this problem is not yet solved. “Gas pressure increased until it was high enough to push away the overlaying layers in a powerful injection, forming the crater,” explained geochemist Hans-Wolfgang …

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Moradi appointed associate editor of Geoscience Data Journal

The Geoscience Data Journal (GDJ) is an online-only platform where researchers across varied scientific disciplines can publish articles and entries about data sets, data services, and best practices for data publishing. Before any article goes into the journal, however, it must pass through a series of peer reviewers. Also overseeing the journal and its entries is an editorial board. Dr. Isaac Moradi, an assistant research scientist at the University of Maryland’s Earth System Science …

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Lasers, Jedi, but no Han Solo?: How UMD Researchers’ Project is Heading to Space

The University of Maryland will soon add “Instrument on International Space Station” to its list of accomplishments, thanks to the NASA-approved Global Ecosystem Dynamics Investigation (GEDI) Lidar project. The GEDI project consists of a laser-based system that will observe the structure of forest canopy globally, examining the transformations in natural carbon storage within the carbon cycle from both anthropogenic and natural climate changes. “We’d like to know what the biomass is …

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NASA’s DISCOVER-AQ Mission Gives Researchers Better Understanding of U.S. Air Quality

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) held hearings Tuesday, July 29th 2014to gauge public reaction of a White House plan to reduce carbon-dioxide emissions over the next 15 years. The EPA held these meetings in three cities: Washington, D.C., Atlanta and Denver. Also in Denver on that same Tuesday were officials from another federal agency focusing on air quality in the U.S. In fact, researchers from NASA’s DISCOVER-AQ mission have been in Colorado for weeks collecting air pollution …

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Climate Change Weekly Roundup: 08/05/14

Publication: Washington Post Author: Terrence McCoy Date: July 29, 2014 Title: Two new mysterious craters emerge in Siberia, deepening giant hole saga Throughout July geologists, ecologists and historians have been analyzing the sudden appearance of three mysterious craters in Yamal and the Taymyr Peninsula of Siberia. “It is not like this is the work of men,” one expert explained to the Siberian Times, which has been hot on the giant crater story from the get-go. “But [it] also …

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NASA’s OCO-2: Measuring the Earth’s Carbon Dioxide Sources from Space

NASA researchers look forward to getting their first results from OCO-2, a satellite that will study Earth’s carbon dioxide sources and sinks and their contributions to climate change from space. After Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO)’s launch vehicle failure in 2009, NASA researchers, who have been working on this project for the past 13 years, finally launched its successor, OCO-2, into orbit on July 2, 2014. “OCO-2 was designed to do one thing and one thing …

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