By analyzing nearly a decade of satellite data, a team of scientists led by researchers from the University of California, Irvine and funded by NASA has created a model that can successfully predict the severity and geographic distribution of fires in the Amazon rain forest and the rest of South America months in advance.
View original post here:
Ocean Temperatures Can Predict Amazon Fire Season Severity
More on SKCEA.org:
- Texas tries to censor climate change information
by Sarah Laskow. The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality is learning the hard way that politicizing a government report is much, much harder after you've hired a reputable and principled scientist to write it. John Anderson, the author of the agency's report on Tex... - Barred Owls
The Barred Owl is a large typical owl. It goes by many other names, including eight hooter, rain owl, wood owl, and striped owl, but is probably known best as the hoot owl. Barred owls may be more abundant in coniferous forests of the Pacific Northwest than previously recognized,... - Woman Hiker Breaks Appalachian Trail Record
Jennifer Pharr Davis has hiked the 2,175-mile Appalachian Trail twice before. She has even written a book about the long slog and its endless rewards and challenges. This summer, she hit the trail yet again with the goal of going even faster than her 2008 time of 57 days and some... - Google’s open-source, wireless, smartphone-controlled light bulb
by Christopher Mims. Google continues to roll out new details about its wirelessly-controlled “smart” light bulb, which gets around all the problems usually associated with making a home energy-aware. The latest: the company is working on open-source software that wi... - Tropical Storm Emily slows, aims at Haiti
Tropical Storm Emily slowed to a crawl on its path toward Haiti on Wednesday, but it was still taking aim at the chronically poor nation struggling to recover from last year's devastating earthquake. Emily was about 50 miles southeast of Isla Beata in the southernmost Dominican R...
No comments yet.