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Inquirer on MSNScientists race to uncover depth of ocean damage sparked by LA wildfiresOn a recent Sunday, Tracy Quinn drove down the Pacific Coast Highway to assess damage wrought upon the coastline by the Palisades Fire. The water line was darkened by ash. Burnt remnants of washing ...
Tracy Quinn, president of Heal the Bay, assessed the damage from the Palisades Fire, noting hazardous ash and debris ...
As crews work to remove potentially hundreds of thousands of tons of hazardous materials from the Los Angeles wildfires, researchers and officials are trying to understand how the fires on land have i ...
The study, by Mote Marine Laboratory, connects increased harmful algae blooms with the long-term acidification of Florida’s ...
How did Earth transform from a hostile, acidic ocean world to one that nurtured life? Scientists at Yale and in Singapore ...
Plastic is the most prevalent marine pollutant, and plastic surfaces are the fastest growing habitat in the ocean.
Cyanobacteria thrive in warm, sunny lakes and ponds that contain excess nitrogen and phosphorus nutrients derived from ...
Plastic waste harms marine animals, disrupting ecosystems and food chains that humans depend on. Plastics release harmful ...
Ambae islanders combine their ecological observations with scientific data to develop an early-warning system to predict ...
Researchers at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa recently discovered that many species of fungi isolated from Hawai‘i’s ...
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