BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Great tits cope well with warming

At least one of Britain's birds appears to be coping well as climate change alters the availability of a key food. Researchers found that great tits are laying eggs earlier in the spring than they used to, keeping step with the earlier emergence of caterpillars. Writing in the journal Science, they point out that the same birds in Holland have not managed to adjust. Saved By: olga9999 | View Details | Give Thanks
I am creating artificial life, declares US gene pioneer | Science | The Guardian

Craig Venter, the controversial DNA researcher involved in the race to decipher the human genetic code, has built a synthetic chromosome out of laboratory chemicals and is poised to announce the creation? Saved By: dogboi | View Details | Give Thanks
It is no longer an oxymoron to sell freezers to Eskimos. The unfrozen future of Arctic life is here. Saved By: Jonathon D. Colman | View Details | Give Thanks
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Researchers found warmer winters and cooler summers, combined with more snow and rainfall, could be causing some mountain glaciers to increase in size.
Leading scientists in the United States say the hole in the ozone layer of the Earth's atmosphere above the Antarctic appears to have stopped widening.
Climatic changes could lead to more outbreaks of bubonic plague among human populations, a study suggests. Researchers found that the bacterium that caused the deadly disease became more widespread following warmer springs and wetter summers.
Arctic Was Warm, Wet and Ice-free 55 Million Years Ago!

Do you know, the Arctic was extremely warm, unusually wet and ice-free 55 million years ago?! This is found by the ocean-floor sediment cores’ new analysis, which was collected near the North Pole. This finding bolsters the prediction that massive amounts of greenhouse gases were released into the Earth’s atmosphere.
It seems Global Warming Gore isn't as green as he tells everyone else to be.
The world's second largest ice cap may be melting three times faster than indicated by previous measurements, according to newly released gravity data collected by satellites.
An early photograph of Lowell Cemetery in Massachusetts, taken in May 1868, shows leafless trees. A modern May photograph is full of foliage. Primack notes that Boston has warmed by around 2.5 °C during this time — above average for the United States, but a level of warming that is expected across the country during this century.
n addition to the more obvious effects of climate change, such as rising sea levels and increasing storm activity, there is the potential to dramatically alter ecological communities.
One U.S. scientist predicts that the effects of global warming will push sea levels around the world three feet higher in 100 years. CBS' 60 Minutes traveled north to get a first-hand look at the effects of global warming.
Interesting idea, the internet is a big network of servers, and servers are electricity hogs. When it gets hot servers start going down. Will we be seeing more of this as global warming continues?
Timothy Squires I. predicts the kingdom of God over men in a book of poetry and prophecy titled the same. He says he predicted Hurricane Katrina, the gulf War, the Carolina Hurricane's Stanley Cup victory in his Nostrodamus like free verse dealing with the kingdom of God. The book availabe through www.lulu.com/tsquires & www.hi-poweradvertising.co
The film actually came from a slick Republican public relations firm called DCI, which just happens to have oil giant Exxon as a client.
According to the Cato institute, despite the summer heatwave, the temperatures don't even come close to topping the temperatures of the heatwave of 1930, which was well before the notion that increasing temperatures are caused by man maded global warming.
"They are neither sufficiently reducing carbon dioxide emissions, nor are they investing enough in developing the technologies that would reduce the world's dependence on fossil fuels." The International Energy Agency predicts that by 2030 global energy demand will increase by 50%.







