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Miller-McCune

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Archive for Global Warming

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Core of the Problem

The National Ice Core Laboratory tries to answer one question: As the Earth warms, will sea levels rise three feet? Or 30? Or even more?

Protect a Levee, Protect the World

A method of buttressing California's aging levees shows promise for capturing carbon dioxide.

Bit Player Turns Out to Be the Star

The trace element molybdenum, and not that poseur phosphorous, governs the profligacy of your average tropical rainforest. 

Cautious Optimism for Obama’s Policy on Science

Professionals hope the new president can change the culture of science in the White House. 

Under Bush, Science Learned It Must Speak Up

Outgoing administration used science when it needed it and scorned it when it didn’t.

A Future of Less

Miller-McCune magazine exclusive: Here's how government can help curb America's seemingly endless appetite for "more."

Study Hails Europe's Cap-and-Trade

Three years ago, amid a flurry of expectations and public controversy, the European Union instituted the world's first cap-and-trade system to limit carbon emissions. Today, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology analysis of the EU Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) affirms that despite rather unstable beginnings, the system has been an unprecedented success,…

Climate Change Leaves Wildflowers in the Cold

In the wildflower meadows of the West, we may be hearing the whisperings of a post-climate-change world.

More Hype Equals Less Action on Climate Change

Two new surveys regarding Americans’ attitudes toward climate change suggest that Americans have yet to make a personal connection to the issue.

A Really Inconvenient Truth

The climate problem can be solved. But tackling it is going to be a lot harder than you’ve been led to believe.