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Researchers deploy den boxes as possible tool to aid mysterious fishers
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Minnesota briefs: $2 1 million grant aims to find iron ore of the future
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NRRI Receives $2.1 Million Grant for Iron Production Research
The Natural Resources Research Institute has received a $2.1 million grant to work on tech that is more efficient in using a type of iron pellet.
March 2, 2021
HERMANTOWN, Minn. – The Natural Resources Research Institute has received a $2.1 million grant to work on tech that is more efficient in using a type of iron pellet.
Direct reduced iron pellets are items that are wanted for the electric arc furnace steel industry, which makes up 70% of the market. The funding is directed towards advancing production of these pellets with the hopes of keeping the steel industry strong for years to come.
Get Outdoors: Learn about health of Lake Superior wetlands during River Talk
Editor’s note: Some events may have been canceled after the time of publication. Please check with local organizers.
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Coastal Wetlands: Dynamic Ecosystems of Lake Superior: 7 p.m. Jan. 13, via Zoom. Kelly Beaster and Reed Schwarting with the University of Wisconsin-Superior s Lake Superior Research Institute have spent the past five years monitoring the health of wetlands along Lake Superior, including those in the St. Louis River Estuary. This River Talk will include time for questions and answers. Free. Zoom meeting link: http://bit.ly/3nhXT9o; meeting ID: 914 4615 7971; passcode: 163792.
New uses for dead ash, fir and tamarack trees could help restore Minnesota s forests UMD researchers alter properties of undesired woods threatened by pests. January 1, 2021 7:51pm Text size Copy shortlink:
One invasive beetle is ready to devour just about every ash tree left in Minnesota s woods. A caterpillar has killed more than 200,000 acres worth of balsam fir trees in just the last year. Another beetle, a native in the midst of a population boom, has already destroyed about half of the state s tamaracks.
Add it all up and pest outbreaks have left Minnesota with quite a lot of dead trees, useless lumber and dried-out and wasted stands, which, if left to rot, will become one large fire hazard.
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