What On Earth

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The First A in NASA Stands for Aeronautics Jul 27, 2010 12:39:49 PM | Adam Voiland
 
If you've explored NASA's website, you may have noticed that What on Earth is just one of a network of NASA blogs. You can find many of them on this main index page, but there are also NASA bloggers scattered at numerous other pages.
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Performance Art, Rock Music Reach Engineering Nirvana in OK Go Video Jun 03, 2010 02:52:47 PM | NASA Earth Science News Team
 
What do NASA techies do with their spare time? They make rock-n-roll videos that would make their daytime colleagues proud or jealous, or both.
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Soaring for Science Apr 05, 2010 08:57:44 AM | NASA Earth Science News Team
 
The newest bird in NASA's flock -- the unmanned Global Hawk -- took off from Dryden Flight Research Center today.
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NASA Readies for Spring 2010 Ice Bridge Campaign Mar 07, 2010 07:45:32 AM | Adam Voiland
 
Scientists are returning to the Arctic this spring as part of the six-year Operation Ice Bridge mission -- the largest airborne survey of Earth's polar ice ever flown.
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The Uphill Road to Measuring Snow Mar 01, 2010 12:06:02 PM | Adam Voiland
 
One-sixth of the world’s population relies on melted snow for their freshwater, which means good estimates of snow are critical for making realistic predictions of a region’s water supply.
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Rising Temperatures in the Midst of Heavy Snow? Feb 26, 2010 09:42:06 AM | Adam Voiland
 
The last few months have been a bit odd. Too much snow in the mid-Atlantic. Too little for the Winter Olympics in Vancouver. And a dusting nearly everywhere else.
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Greenhouse Molecules Laid Bare Feb 24, 2010 10:14:23 AM | Adam Voiland
 
B-list chemical compounds might have an A-list impact on climate
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Sea level isn't really level at all Mar 15, 2010 08:42:57 AM | NASA Earth Science News Team
 
Even though it’s sometimes convenient to think of the ocean as a great big bathtub, where turning on the tap at one end raises the water level in the whole tub, real sea level rise doesn’t quite happen that way.
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