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10 votes
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Argentina president Javier Milei’s actions after taking office have research institutions facing shutdown. Scientists protest.
18 votes -
The mystery social media account schooling US Congress on how to do its job
39 votes -
Having self-control leads to power: a new study with 3,500 people finds that showing self-control influences how powerful an individual is perceived to be by their peers
20 votes -
TRAPPIST-1 caught stripping atmosphere of possibly habitable exoplanet
12 votes -
The Greenwich meridian's forgotten rival
4 votes -
What is your favorite project that you worked on when first learning to code?
I went to university for computer science up until the pandemic started. It was great. I remember working on so many projects that were basic but a lot of fun and others that were a lot more...
I went to university for computer science up until the pandemic started. It was great. I remember working on so many projects that were basic but a lot of fun and others that were a lot more complex but still fun and rewarding. For example, one of the staples of beginner projects is Conway's Game of Life. I remember building that in HTML, CSS, and Java Script. One of my other favorite projects was a website for alum to visit to see alumni news and events, and also to lookup other alum.
What were your favorite projects when learning to code?
10 votes -
New moons of Uranus and Neptune announced
48 votes -
Out of the rabbit hole? New research shows people can change their minds about conspiracy theories.
14 votes -
What's an obelisk, anyway?
25 votes -
Study finds emojis are differently interpreted depending on gender, culture, and age of viewer
35 votes -
Interactive: The impacts of climate change at 1.5°C, 2°C and beyond
18 votes -
Are we living in an "ice age"? Clearing up some terminology.
When talking about climate, the ice age is mentioned a lot. Sometimes it is said that "the last ice age" ended roughly 10,000 years ago, and sometimes we are still said to be living in an ice age....
When talking about climate, the ice age is mentioned a lot. Sometimes it is said that "the last ice age" ended roughly 10,000 years ago, and sometimes we are still said to be living in an ice age. So which one is correct? Technically both are correct. This is due to a complexity in terminology.
The broader climate state of Earth is divided into two categories: Icehouse Earth and Greenhouse Earth (Maslin, 2014). The state when there are continental glaciers (those that cover continents, separate from glaciers seen on mountains) at any point on Earth is called the Icehouse Earth, and the state when they do not exist is called the Greenhouse Earth. Approximately 80% of the last 500 million years has been spent as a Greenhouse Earth (Spicer and Corfield, 1992). During the icehouse state of the Earth, there are glacial and interglacial periods. The glacial period occurs when the glaciers at the poles move towards the lower latitudes of Earth, that is, towards the equator. The interglacial period is the time when glaciers remain at the poles.
Both the Icehouse Earth state and the glacial period are called Ice Age, but this is misleading. The last so-called “ice age” occurred 11,700 years ago (Clark et al., 2016). This event refers to the glacial period seen on Earth. However, the Earth is still in an "ice age" because it is still in the Icehouse Earth state. Even though it is currently in the interglacial warming period, this warming is approximately 15 times faster due to climate change (Clark et al., 2016). As the anthropogenic global warming gets stronger, the rate of warming will also increase.
The glacial periods seen in the last 500,000 years can be seen in this picture. Source for the picture is here.
The cycle of glacial and interglacial periods is clearly visible. One of the main factors that caused the emergence of Icehouse Earth states and glacial periods is the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. It ended and started the ages by greatly changing the conditions on Earth (Maslin, 2014).
In conclusion, we are currently living in an ice age and also not. The reason for this is that the word ice age refers to two different phenomena. Therefore, it would be more useful to use the terms Icehouse Earth and glacial period instead of ice age. However, how this will be translated into everyday language remains a challenge.
Sources
- Clark, P., Shakun, J., Marcott, S. et al. (2016). Consequences of twenty-first-century policy for multi-millennial climate and sea-level change. Nature Clim Change 6, 360–369.
- Maslin, M. (2014). Climate change: a very short introduction. OUP Oxford.
- Spicer, R. A. & Corfield, R. M. (1992). A review of terrestrial and marine climates in the Cretaceous with implications for modelling the ‘Greenhouse Earth’. Geological Magazine, 129(2), 169-180 pp.
8 votes -
Citation cartels help some mathematicians—and their universities—climb the rankings
8 votes -
The blue LED was supposed to be impossible—until a young engineer proposed a moonshot idea
26 votes -
US Congressional budget gridlock leads to stunning NASA layoffs
21 votes -
Finnish study finds that people from different cultures reported the same bodily sensations when listening to the same songs
7 votes -
Analysis of a common preservative used to kill pathogens in food shows that it also affects beneficial bacteria
19 votes -
A partisan solution to partisan gerrymandering
21 votes -
Finland has rejected the far right, but is the country ready for a gay, Green head of state in Pekka Haavisto?
8 votes -
‘It’s insane’: New viruslike entities found in human gut microbes
30 votes -
The Hawthorne effect in human resource management is based on unreliable studies
17 votes -
What happened to David Graeber?
6 votes -
Can ‘micro-acts of joy’ make you happier? I tried them for seven days.
11 votes -
Embracing idiosyncrasies over optimization: The path to innovation in biotechnological design
3 votes -
Food scientists at Finnish startup SuperGround have found a way to make chicken nuggets and fish cakes out of otherwise discarded bones and hard tissues
28 votes -
Magpies swoop bald men more often, eight-year-old's viral survey finds
34 votes -
Denmark's far-right, populist Nye Borgerlige party is being dissolved – other right-wing parties applaud, spying greater share of votes
14 votes -
Red and blue US states: dichotomized maps mislead and reduce perceived voting influence
25 votes -
Astronomers make rare exoplanet discovery, and a giant leap in detecting Earth-like bodies
15 votes -
Adopting rightwing policies ‘does not help centre-left win votes’
36 votes -
How crowded are the oceans? New maps show what flew under the radar until now.
27 votes -
Scientists attempt to explain “magic islands” on Saturn’s largest moon
6 votes -
Lisica - Weekly episodes of a scientist soap opera
6 votes -
I got my IELTS scores back and I need help
Overall band score 8. What's the next step? I am an Indian and wish to pursue a master's program in the US. Should I prepare for the GRE and apply for spring semester? Total newbie about all of...
Overall band score 8.
What's the next step? I am an Indian and wish to pursue a master's program in the US.
Should I prepare for the GRE and apply for spring semester? Total newbie about all of this university stuff.
Thanks in advance.
10 votes -
Coffee connoisseurs have long believed that adding a little water to beans before grinding them makes a difference. A new study by researchers at the University of Oregon seems to confirm exactly why.
35 votes -
Hacking the Climate - 37c3
7 votes -
The origin of mysterious green ‘ghosts’ in the sky has been discovered
18 votes -
Wrongfully jailed for twenty years, Australia’s ‘most hated woman’ likely to receive record compensation
18 votes -
Top court clears path for Democrats to redraw House map in New York
15 votes -
How much can forests fight climate change? A sensor in space has answers.
12 votes -
Course evaluations are garbage science
23 votes -
The strange clouds of alien worlds
6 votes -
I will be very sad when David Attenborough dies
I got teary eyed when my 5yo asked me about how baleen whales feed the other day, and I showed him a video narrated by David. Just today I saw another great video from David. There will never be...
I got teary eyed when my 5yo asked me about how baleen whales feed the other day, and I showed him a video narrated by David.
Just today I saw another great video from David. There will never be another like him (edit: David, not my kid), which is the saddest part of this post.
35 votes -
99% of the world’s bananas are threatened by a fungus. To save them, scientists are turning to genetic modification.
24 votes -
NASA mission excels at spotting greenhouse gas emission sources
23 votes -
What are the best intro books for different science fields?
I wish to know more about science in general and books are a good way to do that. We have a good assortment of science-minded people on Tildes, so I think it would be interesting to know what...
I wish to know more about science in general and books are a good way to do that. We have a good assortment of science-minded people on Tildes, so I think it would be interesting to know what everyone recommends. The one requisite is that the books must be adequate for a general audience. This means that the books must not require the reader to hold a STEM degree or even have a particular aptitude for STEM.
Just so it is abundantly clear: I am looking for books that people with an arts and humanities background can read. Laypeople. "Dummies".
I'm asking more about books that are intros to a specific field than introductions to science in general.
Thanks!
34 votes -
Denmark is building on the success of blockbuster drugs – the country's focus on reinvestment is feeding a stream of discovery
7 votes -
The Republican Revolution and how the party switch actually happened
13 votes -
NASA to launch NASA+, a free streaming service
73 votes