5h
Public News Service on MSNMI scientist: Humans, not climate change, to blame for toxic lakesEach summer, more lake beaches shut down as toxic algae blooms spread across the water and while climate change is often ...
The Texas Gulf Coast looks like it's currently enjoying a bubble bath. From Port Aransas to Quintana Beach, mounds of sea foam are bubbling up on beaches along the state's shoreline. While it ...
Recent cyanobacteria surveys of the Hurunui River at SH1 have shown the cover of potentially toxic algae (benthic cyanobacteria) in the river have reduced and is now below levels that are of concern ...
This winter's deaths come nearly six months after a mysteriously ailment linked to toxic algae killed more than 50 endangered ...
Scientists in an Ann Arbor research office were among hundreds fired nationally as the Trump administration slashes staff ...
A new study shows melting Antarctic ice changes the density of ocean layers around Antarctica, driving a slowdown of the ...
Scientists are gaining new insights into how plankton supports life on Earth — just as climate change is changing everything.
John Manley has spent the vast bulk of his 25 year-plus journalistic career with The Irish News. He has been the paper's ...
Scott Martin is a professional angler who has Lake Okeechobee water flowing through his veins. He recently took me out on the lake on a blustery winter day.
21h
StudyFinds on MSNWater-resistant glass on horizon — thanks to sound-based ‘sonochemicals’In a laboratory at Curtin University in Australia, researchers have stumbled upon what might seem like a magical ...
22hon MSN
The boat bobbed gently off Malibu's Big Rock Beach as a trio of scientific divers wriggled into wet suits and double-checked ...
Water that comes straight from natural sources, dubbed “raw water,” is gaining popularity. Raw water advocates reject public ...
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