Christopher Joyce http://upr.org en With Rising Seas, America's Birthplace Could Disappear http://upr.org/post/rising-seas-americas-birthplace-could-disappear By the end of the century, the birthplace of America may be underwater.<p>The first successful English colony in America was at Jamestown, Va., a swampy island in the Chesapeake Bay. The colony endured for almost a century, and remnants of the place still exist. You can go there and see the ruins. You can walk where Capt. John Smith and Pocahontas walked. But Jamestown is now threatened by rising sea levels that scientists say could submerge the island by century's end.<p>You wouldn't know that by looking. In springtime, Jamestown is a carpet of bright new grass. Tue, 14 May 2013 19:35:00 +0000 Christopher Joyce 24486 at http://upr.org With Rising Seas, America's Birthplace Could Disappear Bones Tell Tale Of Desperation Among The Starving At Jamestown http://upr.org/post/bones-tell-tale-desperation-among-starving-jamestown "First they ate their horses, and then fed upon their dogs and cats, as well as rats, mice and snakes."<p>So says James Horn of the historical group <a href="http://www.history.org/">Colonial Williamsburg</a>, paraphrasing an account by colony leader George Percy of what conditions were like for the hundreds of men and women stranded in Jamestown, Va., with little food in the dead of winter in 1609.<p>They even ate their shoes. Wed, 01 May 2013 22:40:00 +0000 Christopher Joyce 23875 at http://upr.org Bones Tell Tale Of Desperation Among The Starving At Jamestown How Doctors Would Know If Syrians Were Hit With Nerve Gas http://upr.org/post/how-doctors-would-know-if-syrians-were-hit-nerve-gas President Obama affirmed Tuesday that there's evidence Syrians have been attacked with chemical weapons — in particular, nerve gas.<p>But that's not the same as proof positive.<p>"We don't know how they were used, when they were used, who used them," Obama <a href="http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/04/30/180026256/obama-to-hold-news-conference-this-morning">said</a>. Tue, 30 Apr 2013 20:43:00 +0000 Christopher Joyce 23812 at http://upr.org How Doctors Would Know If Syrians Were Hit With Nerve Gas What's Behind The 'Fairy Circles' That Dot West Africa? http://upr.org/post/whats-behind-fairy-circles-dot-west-africa There's a mystery in West Africa that's puzzled scientists for years. Strange circles of bare soil appear in grassland; they're commonly called "fairy circles." These naturally occurring shapes last for decades, until the grass eventually takes over and the circles fade.<p>Now German scientists think they have an explanation — a horde of insects seems to be bioengineering thousands of miles of desert.<p>If you fly from Angola down to South Africa you'll spot thousands of these fairy circles down below. Thu, 28 Mar 2013 21:33:00 +0000 Christopher Joyce 22315 at http://upr.org What's Behind The 'Fairy Circles' That Dot West Africa? Is The Sky The Limit For Wind Power? http://upr.org/post/sky-limit-wind-power Wind power is growing faster than ever — almost <a href="http://www.awea.org/learnabout/publications/reports/upload/AWEA-Fourth-Quarter-Wind-Energy-Industry-Market-Report_Executive-Summary-4.pdf">half of the new sources of electricity</a> added to the U.S. power grid last year were wind farms.<p>But is the sky the limit? Several scientists now say it's actually possible to have so many turbines that they start to lose power. Wed, 27 Mar 2013 20:30:00 +0000 Christopher Joyce 22255 at http://upr.org Is The Sky The Limit For Wind Power? Could Tapping Undersea Methane Lead To A New Gas Boom? http://upr.org/post/could-tapping-undersea-methane-lead-new-gas-boom The new boom in natural gas from shale has changed the energy economy of the United States. But there's another giant reservoir of natural gas that lies under the ocean floor that, theoretically, could dwarf the shale boom.<p>No one had tapped this gas from the seabed until this week, when Japanese engineers pulled some up through a well from under the Pacific. The gas at issue here is called methane hydrate. Methane is natural gas; hydrate means there's water in it. Fri, 15 Mar 2013 09:12:00 +0000 Christopher Joyce 21668 at http://upr.org Could Tapping Undersea Methane Lead To A New Gas Boom? Since End Of Last Ice Age, Rates Of Global Warming 'Amazing And Atypical' http://upr.org/post/end-last-ice-age-rates-global-warming-amazing-and-atypical There's plenty of evidence that the climate has warmed up over the past century, and climate scientists know this has happened throughout the history of the planet. But they want to know more about how this warming is different.<p>Now a research team says it has some new answers. It has put together a record of global temperatures going back to the end of the last ice age — about 11,000 years ago — when mammoths and saber-tooth cats roamed the planet. The study confirms that what we're seeing now is unprecedented.<p>What the researchers did is peer into the past. Fri, 08 Mar 2013 07:23:00 +0000 Christopher Joyce 21348 at http://upr.org Since End Of Last Ice Age, Rates Of Global Warming 'Amazing And Atypical' Elephant Poaching Pushes Species To Brink Of Extinction http://upr.org/post/elephant-poaching-pushes-species-brink-extinction A new study of Central African forest elephants has found their numbers down by 62 percent between 2002 and 2011. The study comes as governments and conservationists meet in Thailand to amend the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species.<p>African forest elephants have been in trouble for a while, but only now have scientists figured out that more than half of them have died over the past decade. Wed, 06 Mar 2013 08:44:00 +0000 Christopher Joyce 21222 at http://upr.org Natural Gas Dethrones King Coal As Power Companies Look To Future http://upr.org/post/natural-gas-dethrones-king-coal-power-companies-look-future The way Americans get their electricity is changing. Coal is in decline. Natural gas is bursting out of the ground in record amounts. And the use of wind and solar energy is growing fast. All this is happening as power companies are trying to choose which kind of energy to bet on for the next several decades.<p>Until recently, half of these plants burned coal to make electricity. Now, that's down to about one-third. Since 2010, about 150 coal plants either have been retired or it's been announced they will be retired soon.<p>What knocked King Coal off its throne? Mostly natural gas. Fri, 01 Mar 2013 21:32:00 +0000 Christopher Joyce 21054 at http://upr.org Natural Gas Dethrones King Coal As Power Companies Look To Future Boston Grapples With The Threat Of Storms And Rising Water http://upr.org/post/boston-grapples-threat-storms-and-rising-water Since the drubbing that Superstorm Sandy gave the Northeast in November, there's a new sense of urgency in U.S. coastal cities. Even though scientists can't predict the next big hurricane, they're confident that a warmer climate is likely to make Atlantic storms bigger and cause more flooding.<p>Cities like Boston are in the bull's-eye.<p>From atmospheric scientist <a href="http://eaps4.mit.edu/faculty/Emanuel/">Kerry Emanuel</a>'s 6th-floor office at MIT, you can look out at Boston and the snow-covered Charles River as it snakes through the city down to the harbor. Fri, 22 Feb 2013 23:06:00 +0000 Christopher Joyce 20721 at http://upr.org Boston Grapples With The Threat Of Storms And Rising Water