Nature
Andes mountain
Garzone and Andrew Leier, associate professor of Earth and Ocean Sciences at the University of South Carolina, used new temperature recording techniques in two different studies of different Andean regions to determine whether rapid eruptions were normal, without mountain formation in the region. Garzone worked in the southern Altiplano and collected meteorological records that preserved ancient soils in low-lying areas near the sea, where temperatures remained warm throughout the region's history, and at higher altitudes, where they cooled as the range of mountains rose. He and Lyre have strong isotope evidence for many of the effects of this increase in Bolivia's central Andes, which focus on the binding behavior of carbon and oxygen isotopes in calcite minerals from rainwater, and their effects are similar.
By Sita Dahal5 years ago in Earth
Red sea
In the Gulf of Aden, biodiversity is among the highest in the world. Low-temperature variance in-depth (0.3 degrees with average annual temperature between shallow and mesophotic waters) (Eyal et al., 2019). Water exchanges between the South and North reduce genetic variation at the macro-ecological level.
By Sita Dahal5 years ago in Earth
Atlantic Ocean
Different boundaries were used to define the boundaries of the North and South Atlantic. Attempts to define open watersheds between the Atlantic and Arctic oceans are based on the unifying of latitude and direct transect, but the two most common areas are 65 degrees N (Arctic Circle) and 66 degrees. The southern boundary of the Atlantic Ocean is not very clear and the name is given to the waters around Antarctica as "Southern Ocean".
By Radha Karki5 years ago in Earth
Beekeeping & Horticulture
Nature’s beauty is amazing! I love flowers & bees buzzing. Each joy seems to come with hazing. The love of bees let's not exploit. Our sense perception is adroit. Our toxic sting a last resort. We have advanced society. With guards' workers & royalty. Our food is packed with energy. Some men exploit us for money. Sometimes we’re starved of our honey. Us bees don’t think it's so funny! Our abundance we love to share. We love bee keepers who do care. The ways bees work is always fair. You cannot lie to a bright bee. It might surprise what we can see. These creatures are for you & me. We adapt to both heat & frost. Rebels bees do pay a steep cost. With small error not all is lost.
By David Duran 5 years ago in Earth
Aqua Energetics & Ocean Super Intelligence
People always seek energy. Pure waters restore clarity. We dread a water scarcity. Water is essential for life. High pressure jets feel like a knife. It cleans us & soothes us of our strife. Many problems water can solve. Memories of fears, tears, dissolve. For this our best we involve. We’ve run many experiments. We filter & assess contents. We still have much more we’ll invent. It’s an electric conductor, & the base of dis-infectors. Towards water we are respecters. We’ve got new hydro electrics, for river & wave kinetics. Some are from algae genetics. We daily discover new things. High vibe water does seem to sing! We know the blessing it can bring.
By David Duran 5 years ago in Earth
The world post sharks
It started as everything in the US does- with a post on social media. A post that quickly gained the followers and opposers. A post that could have been a joke taken too seriously and photoshop done a little too well. Maybe it was real- I don't know, and frankly, none of it matters any longer. My two cents- had I the ability to go back in time and completely obliterate that post from existence- I would do so in a heartbeat.
By Salomé Saffiri5 years ago in Earth
A Lesson from my Father
My father named me Ishmael. I suspect that he did it as a joke, somehow knowing that I would grow up to work on boats. He certainly didn’t do it because of a love of Herman Melville’s writing; other than the Sunday papers, largely for the obituaries and sports pages, he read very little. He wasn’t Jewish either. No, my father was the sort of Christian who attended church every couple of Sundays each month (ours was a run-down little Presbyterian chapel, its white paint stripped in parts by sea foam and salt air) but otherwise thought little of religion. That was probably why things didn’t work out with my mother, who thought a great deal about religion (but of course, made an exception when signing the divorce papers).
By Alex Hawksworth5 years ago in Earth
1910 Halley's Comet
Named after astronomer Edmond Halley, Halley's Comet only passes by Earth every 76 years or so. When it buzzed our planet in 1910, it sparked a lot of interest — according to Wired.com, telescope sales skyrocketed as the comet neared. Hotels even offered special deals, so people could gather on top of their roofs to watch the meteor pass.
By Tami Osburn5 years ago in Earth
Is Alcohol Good Is Killing Germs?
If you are not prepared to wash your hands with at least 20 seconds of soap and water, the CDC suggests using alcohol-based hand sanitizers that contain at least 60 percent ethyl alcohol (listed as "ethanol," "ethyl alcohol", "isopropanol" or "2-propanol" on the label). The FDA has also put some of these products on import warnings in Mexico, which can help prevent products that appear to violate these regulations from entering the US until the FDA reviews product safety.
By Thomos James5 years ago in Earth






