24/7 Farm  News Coverage
June 20, 2014
WATER WORLD
Scientists take first dip into water's mysterious 'no-man's land'
Stanford CA (SPX) Jun 20, 2014
Scientists at the Department of Energy's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory have made the first structural observations of liquid water at temperatures down to minus 51 degrees Fahrenheit, within an elusive "no-man's land" where water's strange properties are super-amplified. The research, made possible by SLAC's Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) X-ray laser and reported June 18 in Nature, opens a new window for exploring liquid water in these exotic conditions, and promises to improve our unde ... read more
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WATER WORLD

Stanford breakthrough provides picture of underground water
Superman isn't the only one who can see through solid surfaces. In a development that could revolutionize the management of precious groundwater around the world, Stanford researchers have pioneered ... more
WATER WORLD

Fighting hits water supply in east Ukraine city
Up to one million people face water shortages in eastern Ukraine as workers battle to repair pipes damaged by fighting in rebel-held Donetsk, a city spokesman said on Thursday. ... more
FARM NEWS

India authority orders Coke plant closed
Authorities in northern India have ordered the closure of a Coca-Cola bottling plant at the centre of protests that it is extracting too much groundwater, an official said Wednesday. ... more
SEED DAILY


WATER WORLD

US hosts talks to save oceans under 'siege'
US Secretary of State John Kerry launches an unprecedented global effort Monday to save the world's oceans under siege from overfishing, climate change and pollution. ... more


FARM NEWS

Findings may advance iron-rich, cadmium-free crops
With news reports of toxic, cadmium-tainted rice in China, a new study describes a protein that transports metals in certain plants and holds promise for developing iron-rich but cadmium-free crops. ... more
spacecraft sub-system supplier
CubeSats, SmallSats and MicroSats

William Cress Corporation - We Build To Last
UAV Payloads 2014, 24 - 25 June - London, UK
Training Space Professionals Since 1970

Tempur-Pedic Mattress Comparison & Memory Foam Mattress Review
WATER WORLD

Water found to provide blueprints for root architecture
Soil is a microscopic maze of nooks and crannies that hosts a wide array of life. Plants explore this environment by developing a complex branched network of roots that tap into scarce resources suc ... more
CLIMATE SCIENCE

Quarter of Djibouti population desperate for drought aid: UN
Nearly a quarter of the population in drought-hit Djibouti is in desperate need of aid, with malnutrition and a dramatic lack of water causing a mass exodus from rural areas, the UN said on Thursday. ... more
24/7 Energy News Coverage
AALTO plans Zephyr stratospheric hub in northern Australia and seeks local payload partners
Ancient guano drove Chincha coastal power
UAH lands first DARPA award for biological sciences department
FARM NEWS

Palmer amaranth threatens Midwest farm economy
An invasive weed that has put some southern cotton farmers out of business is now finding its way across the Midwest - and many corn and soybean growers don't yet appreciate the threat, University o ... more
FARM NEWS

Famine fear won't sway minds on GM crops
A sack-hauling time traveler from the 21st century lands in an Irish potato field in 1849, just before a terrible famine, and asks: If you thought genetically modified potatoes could avert late blig ... more
FARM NEWS

EU to allow states to decide to grow GM foods
The European Union will allow member countries to make their own decisions on growing genetically modified (GM) food in a compromise deal on Thursday that followed years of fraught discussions. ... more
Startup in the Land of the Rising Sun; A Japanese Solar Venture - by Bradley L. Bartz


FARM NEWS

How much fertilizer is too much for the climate?
Helping farmers around the globe apply more-precise amounts of nitrogen-based fertilizer can help combat climate change. In a new study published in this week's Proceedings of the National Academy o ... more
FARM NEWS

Report supports shutdown of all high seas fisheries
Fish and aquatic life living in the high seas are more valuable as a carbon sink than as food and should be better protected, according to research from the University of British Columbia. The ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Sidekick autonomy software guides YFQ-42A test mission for CCA program
Infleqtion lists shares on NYSE as neutral atom quantum firm
Top Chinese gaming companies continue to challenge
FARM NEWS

Common bean genome sequence provides powerful tools to improve critical food crop
String bean, snap bean, haricot bean, and pinto and navy bean. These are just a few members of the common bean family - scientifically called Phaseolus vulgaris. These beans are critically important ... more
FARM NEWS

Retracing early cultivation steps: Lessons from comparing citrus genomes
Citrus is the world's most widely cultivated fruit crop. In the U.S. alone, the citrus crop was valued at over $3.1 billion in 2013. Originally domesticated in Southeast Asia thousands of years ago ... more
WATER WORLD

New England lakes recovering rapidly from acid rain
For more than 40 years, policy makers have been working to reduce acid rain, a serious environmental problem that can devastate lakes, streams, and forests and the plants and animals that live in th ... more
WATER WORLD

One dead in Khartoum protest over water cuts
One person was killed Sunday in the Sudanese capital as police fired tear gas to disperse a demonstration over water shortages, police and witnesses said. ... more
WATER WORLD

India monsoon advances as heatwave bakes north
India's monsoon, dubbed an "economic lifeline", advanced along the southern coast Saturday after arriving nearly a week late as a heatwave baked the north, causing blackouts in the power-starved country. ... more

FARM NEWS

Truvia sugar substitute proves deadly to curious fruit flies
One of the most popular sugar substitutes on the market is also an insecticide - masking the bitterness of coffee one minute, killing fruit flies the next. ... more
FARM NEWS

Parasites fail to halt European bumblebee invasion of the UK
A species of bee from Europe that has stronger resistance to parasite infections than native bumblebees has spread across the UK, according to new research at Royal Holloway, University of London. ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com
Small-Body Robot Review Charts Path From Module Design to System-Level Co-Design
Drone Radar Over Alaska and Wyoming Points Way to Buried Ice on Mars
Sub-Neptunes Vanish Around Red Dwarf Stars in McMaster Exoplanet Survey
FARM NEWS

Drones give farmers an eye in the sky to check on crop progress

WATER WORLD

Global Precipitation Measurement Core Observatory Passes Starts Mission

WOOD PILE

Half of world's forest species at risk: UN

FARM NEWS

Satellites improving lives in rural Africa

WATER WORLD

Britain's urban rivers cleanest in 20 years

WATER WORLD

Rolling old river is indeed changing

FARM NEWS

Blunting rice disease

WATER WORLD

13 dead as monsoon triggers havoc in Sri Lanka capital

FARM NEWS

Drop in global malnutrition depends on ag productivity, climate change

FARM NEWS

Chinese wines struggle to uncork overseas sales

France's unloved tipples hope to match cognac's Asia boom

US city drops threat to close 'smelly' hot sauce factory

Weather Impacts on Food: A QandA with NASA's Molly Brown

Australian organic farmer loses GM test case

Satellite imagery shows drought-ridden Lake Powell at half capacity

NMSU's drought-tolerant alfalfa variety created to meet New Mexico growers' needs

Asia's largest wine expo opens in Hong Kong

Wondering about the state of the environment? Just eavesdrop on the bees

European farmers adapting to climate change

Deep-buried carbon may pose climate risk: study

US Farmers Can Turn their Ag Waste Problems into Profit

China Bright Food to buy majority stake in Israel's Tnuva

The Added Value of Local Food Hubs

With climate changing, Southern plants do better than Northern locals

Shrub growth decreases as winter temps warm up

Big drop in wintertime fog needed by fruit and nut crops

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