"global warming moves to the poles" I am your uninvited editor. During consistent +T since 1970's, high latitudes (and elevations) have always been fastest. But station data are less abundant than we would wish. Permafrost defrost is activating soil microbes that metabolize methane to CO2. I am not keeping up with new publications on that well. CO2 will 'emit' more there, unless new plant growth there traps C in balance. Work is in work. Sea-floor methane hydrates are an important concern, but 'instant' is not the adverb I'd choose.
US grant approvals and funding for science. Things are changing: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-02557-z The fight over science funding: Congress vs. the OMB - Ars Technica
On Feb 6 you asked a similar question in this thread and I responded. Other readers might recall that a bit better. We could add that research funding in Europe also includes peer review by scientists doing similar research: Collaboration with Research Funding Organisations - ESF - European Science Foundation. ESF is a major funder there. I would be completely surprised if any other funders used ideological assessments by appointed government officials in funding decisions. In summary, US, EU and China base research funding decisions on peer review. US is only recently and uniquely veering away from that.
Lead the element is highly toxic to animals. Very surprising that a lizard species has high tolerance: Lead-resistant lizards in New Orleans could hold clues to combating lead poisoning | EurekAlert!
Heatwaves are such a bother: More than 1,100 deaths linked to Spain's heatwave Concordance of published evidence shows increases in frequency, duration and severity. No one here has asked to read all that. Are global weather and climate summaries all 'cooked'? We considered that in the past, but I've not seen much 'just asking questions' recently. In old discussions I offered that individual station records, with chain of custody and all the rest of it, could be purchased for judicial assessment. No one has ever gone that route so maybe I should never repeat it again. == But here is an interesting thing absent from published research on changing climates. Heatwaves with high humidity trouble humans but those with high humidity trouble plants. Stresses are separate with T not too high; at higher T, effects are not separate. Your reporter is 'on that' when PriusChat distractions don't. I will summarize things here later.
US depends on foreign sources for many minerals, and now exerts various forms of pressure to stabilize or increase those streams. An alternative approach is to extract those minerals from domestic mining waste streams: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adw8997 This is a pay-walled publication and I have previously suggested ways to get around that. Even without such effort, the open supplemental data files are a delight for those interested in vast geochemical data. Spreadsheets! Overall idea is that with varying levels of effort, varying amounts of minerals can be obtained from these domestic waste streams. A Tour de force for Colorado School of Mines. And may I add, a great use of NSF research funding.
Media reporting on a interesting and useful study: . The hidden climate battle between forests and the ocean | ScienceDaily Is marred by its lurid title. This is not a land/sea 'battle' and it is not 'hidden'. It does rely on modern remote sensing tech. I assure readers Rem Sens is not going away, regardless of particular governments' mercurial policies. -- I have long wondered if general public impression of science is influenced by how it is described in media. Those are not nearly the same thing.
Carl Sagan tells a story in Chapter 1 of The Demon-Haunted World of being picked up by a driver who asked him if it was confusing to have the same name as that scientist guy, After finding out he was that scientist guy, the driver had all kinds of questions he wanted to ask about science. Only none of his questions were about actual science: [the driver]—well-spoken, intelligent, curious—had heard virtually nothing of modern science. He had a natural appetite for the wonders of the Universe. He wanted to know about science. It's just that all the science had gotten filtered out before it reached him. Our cultural motifs, our educational system, our communications media had failed this man. What the society permitted to trickle through was mainly pretense and confusion. It had never taught him how to distinguish real science from the cheap imitation. He knew nothing about how science works. Sagan wrote The Demon-Haunted World in 1996....
i think a lot of people get filtered out of science in high school. after that, it appears to be black magic.
I was just recently pointed at the Insane Clown Posse song "Miracles", with the line in it F.cking magnets, how do they work? which, depressingly, is immediately followed by And I don't wanna talk to a scientist I mean, it also is pretty miraculous that in under 3,000 years humans were able to go from "how come this rock wants to point that way?" to understanding free and bound currents, Pauli exclusion of electron spins, polycrystalline structure of iron, and the rest....
""Project 2025 took a dim view of biomedical research agencies purely on ideological grounds, claiming (falsely) that, "Despite its popular image as a benign science agency, NIH was responsible for paying for research in aborted baby body parts, human animal chimera experiments, and gain-of-function viral research that may have been responsible for COVID-19."" Covid 19 WAS made in labs, They already had the MRNA drugs (not a vaccine), they made the disease for the "vaccine" Gain of function on Covid 19 started in Chapel Hill NC, but under Obama bioweapon research became illegal in the USA. It was moved to Ukraine and China. 27 labs in Ukraine. Whuhan among others in China. Multiple evidence shows it was funded by the NIH and WHO. Within 6 months of it's release 3 different scientists/labs proved it has multiple man-made markers.