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  • This week at the NASA Earth Observatory

    January 26, 2011

    Onekotan Island, Kuril Islands, Russian FederationHere’s what’s going on at the NASA Earth Observatory, brought to you by Fred Beyer at EarthSciTeach.

    Arctic Oscillation Chills United States, Warms Arctic

    Landslides in Brazil

    Onekotan Island, Kuril Islands, Russian Federation

    A Clear View of the Alps

    Eruption of Stromboli Volcano, Italy

    Mud Volcano Emerges from the Arabian Sea

    St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands

    Channel Beneath Pine Island Glacier

    Recent Blog Posts

    The Challenges of Picturing Floods
    Over the past week or two, there has been severe flooding in Australia, Brazil, Sri Lanka, and the Phillipines, but all we’ve shown on the Earth Observatory is the flooding in Australia. Why?

    NASA News

    Green Touches Energize Kennedy’s Newest Facility

    NASA’s Glory Mission Will Study Key Pieces of the Climate Puzzle

    Headlines from the press, radio, and television

    2010 hits global temperature high

    Could Climate Change Have Led To The Fall Of Rome?

    Changing Climate Means Changing Oceans

    Calif. Plants Put A Wrinkle In Climate Change Plans

    Records Melt Away on Greenland Ice Sheet

    2010 matches record for world’s hottest year: WMO

    Greenland’s Ice Feels the Heat in Record-Setting 2010

    New Figures Confirm That 2010 Was a Hot Year

    Some Himalayan glaciers advancing: study

    Reefs reeling from Queensland floods

    The Sensitive Seasons of Europe

    Downhill Mountain Migrations

    Acid Oceans and Nitrogen Cycles

    2010 Warmest on Record, Says U.N.

    Queensland’s soggy soils revealed

    Deep sea trenches ‘could be carbon sinks’

    Climate secrets of Marianas Trench probed

    Roman rise and fall ‘recorded in trees’

    Following A Wandering North Pole

    Quakes, Tectonic and Theoretical

    Deep-Water Coral Reefs Thriving Off Puerto Rico

    Thaw of Earth’s icy sunshade may stoke warming

    Smaller corals take the heat

    Climate matched Europe’s ups and downs

    Arctic Sea-Ice Controls the Release of Mercury

    Loss of Reflectivity in the Arctic Doubles Estimate of Climate Models

    Improved Measurements of Sun to Advance Understanding of Climate Change

    Dramatic Ocean Circulation Changes Caused a Colder Europe in the Past

    New Remotely Operated Vehicle for Deep Sea Research

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