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Tree restoration may have “higher climate change mitigation potential” than previously thought thanks to trees’ atmospheric ...
New & Observer readers comment on state taxes, Chinese EVs, a viral commencement speech in NC, Donald Trump's policies and ...
President Paul Alivisatos encouraged the Class of 2025 to carry forward UChicago's values as they step into the next chapter.
The Trump administration’s Environmental Protection Agency is taking aim at dozens of rules aimed at protecting the ...
Rising temperatures in the Middle East and North Africa are linked to higher cancer rates in women, highlighting urgent ...
"As temperatures rise, cancer mortality among women also rises -- particularly for ovarian and breast cancers," lead ...
Key Takeaways Women could have a higher risk of cancer with climate changeRising temperatures increased female cancer cases ...
In a new study published in the journal Frontiers in Public Health, researchers discovered that climate change—long-term ...
"Our results suggest that this increase in arsenic levels could significantly elevate the incidence of heart disease, diabetes, and other non-cancer health effects," author Lewis Ziska, associate ...
New Delhi: Climate change could be resulting in higher levels of arsenic in rice, potentially increasing lifetime cancer and health risks for people in Asian countries by 2050, according to a new ...
The new research demonstrates that climate change will ramp up those levels ... inorganic arsenic increases cancer risk. Ziska and his colleagues took the data from their field trials and ...
Climate change may significantly impact arsenic levels ... diabetes, and other non-cancer health effects," said Lewis Ziska, Ph.D., Columbia Mailman School associate professor of Environmental ...