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Jiang attends two-day OA-ICC meeting in Monaco

ESSIC Assistant Research Engineer Liqing Jiang participated in a two-day meeting in Monaco organized by the Ocean Acidification International Coordination Centre (OA-ICC).  The meeting explored the creation of a joint portal for access to global ocean acidification data, within the framework of the emerging Global Ocean Acidification Observing Network (GOA-ON)….

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Kaushal cited in Washington Post article

ESSIC / Geol Associate Professor Sujay Kaushal was cited in a Washington Post article on how heavy usage of road salt this past Winter has resulted in brown tap water in Montgomery County, Maryland. Kaushal noted that higher-sodium water is more likely to disturb manganese sediment on pipe walls, which in turn discolors water….

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Predicting El Niño Devastation, Weeks in Advance

We've all seen the headlines: California is struggling with a historic drought that promises to worsen as the summer wears on. Forecasts of an El Niño in 2014 brought hopes of winter precipitation and much needed relief, but El Niño played truant, as it had just two years prior in 2012. With another El Niño predicted this upcoming winter, now is the perfect time to ask: Why have climate scientists' predictions gone wrong? What are we …

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Schollaert Uz contributes at Smithsonian World Ocean Day

ESSIC researcher Stephanie Schollaert Uz, lead architect of ESSIC/CICS-MD “ClimateBits” multimedia project, was a contributor at the recent World Ocean Day celebration.  Held at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History on June 7-8, Uz's activity was entitled, "Ocean Color Measured by Satellites and You." The activity featured the ESSIC "Science on a Sphere" display–the Magicplanet–and was presented in the museum's Q'rius Lab. …

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Can alternative media bolster research dissemination?

With many scientists and academics locked into a busy year-round cycle of generating data, analyzing results, and subsequently attempting to publish their findings, some may not have the time or energy to consider whether their studies are being read or used. A recent article in The Straits Times acknowledged this potential pitfall, intimating that few people read academic journal articles entirely, largely due to the length of the pieces and the difficulty in accessing the journals. The …

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Murtugudde cited in Livescience post on Indian heat wave

Professor Raghu Murtugudde was cited in a Livescience post regarding the devastating heat wave currently affecting  India.  Murtugudde explained that wind circulations typically responsible for ushering in moisture from the Arabian Sea have instead originated out of the northern Indian deserts, delivering dry air and blistering heat as opposed to the expected rainfall.   Over 1000 people have died as a direct result of the extreme conditions, although some researchers feel the …

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