Similar Posts
Some Hydrothermal Explosions Can Hurl Water and Rock 600 Feet in the Air — Here’s How Yellowstone National Park Monitors Them
On April 15, 2024, scientists claimed a first as monitoring equipment picked up a steam explosion from Yellowstone National Park’s Norris Geyser Basin. No other explosion had ever been recorded using modern equipment, according to a report in Geophysical Research Letters. Researchers are now installing monitoring equipment across the park to track and monitor hydrothermal…
When a Team of Meteorologists and Combat Pilots Set Out to Understand Thunderstorms, They Made Flying Safer for Everyone
The sky was a very dangerous place in the early days of commercial aviation. By flying into storms to learn how they worked, these experts made air travel and weather forecasting much more predictable Lightning strikes in Peckham, Oklahoma. Mitch Dobrowner The 22 passengers who boarded Pennsylvania Central Airlines Flight 19 out of Washington, D.C. on…
Hopkins School’s new innovation center heads to New Haven City Plan
The project would be built on 2.9 acres of the historic prep school’s leafy 101-acre campus, located on a hill at 986 Forest Rd. overlooking the city’s Westville section. It is funded by a $50 million donation from billionaire alumnus John C. Malone, the Milford-born founder and chairman emeritus of Liberty Media Corporation. The gift…
Songbirds are in crisis as trappers and smugglers force them into lucrative bird-singing competitions
On a Sunday afternoon in April, the main minibus terminal in Sukabumi, Indonesia, looked sleepy from the outside. But in an open space round the back, hundreds of men were gathered. Amid chatter and cigarette smoke, the air buzzed with excitement, for one of the region’s biggest bird-singing competitions was set to begin, and a…
This microbiologist endured a four-year court battle over COVID-19 tests
When the COVID-19 pandemic began sweeping across the world in February 2020, Linda Guamán, a microbiologist at the University UTE in Quito, was ready to serve her country. Ecuador announced its first case on 29 February, and the disease spread quickly. Guayaquil, the nation’s largest city, was hit particularly hard. Hospitals, funeral homes and mortuaries…