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The sinking feeling over much of Alaska

The sinking feeling over much of Alaska
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Valley News - Randolph company gets $5 million for extreme cold system project in Hanover

Randolph company gets $5 million for extreme cold system project in Hanover Modified: 5/19/2021 10:58:38 PM HANOVER A Randolph company is getting more than $5 million for a Hanover-based U.S. Army Corps of Engineers research project examining the effects of extreme cold on different kinds of roadways and airstrips. The U.S. Army Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory in Hanover is providing the funding to Applied Research Associates of Randolph. It’s part of a $9 million contract to develop and install a transportation loading system at the frost effects research facility at the CRREL site on Route 10 in Hanover. The system, which won’t be fully operational until 2023, will be designed to simulate the passage of tens of thousands of vehicles in a 24-hour period to demonstrate how different pavements stand up to heavy usage at freezing temperatures.

Genetically engineered grass cleanses soil of toxic pollutants left by military explosives, new research shows

UW researchers genetically engineered a switchgrass (foreground) to break down the explosive chemical RDX using genes from a soil bacterium. The researchers also grew a few thousand of the plantlets in the lab to prepare them to be transplanted in the field. From left to right: Ryan Routsong, Long Zhang, Stuart Strand. This photo was taken in 2018.Mark Stone/University of Washington Large swaths of U.S. military land are covered with munitions components, including the explosive chemical RDX. This molecule is toxic to people and can cause cancer. It also doesn’t naturally break down and can contaminate groundwater.

Spearfish native journeys into polar regions for research

Spearfish native journeys into polar regions for research Follow Us Question of the Day SPEARFISH, S.D. (AP) - A Spearfish native has worked her way up to a pretty cool job - literally. Jennifer Mercer has worked her way from Antarctica to the Arctic Ocean, doing atmospheric and snow studies. Now, she’s the Acting Section Head for the Arctic Sciences Section of the National Science Foundation. Mercer said her journey into the Arctic started in college with her interest in photography and journalism, when her mom bought her a coffee table book, “Poles Apart,” by famous nature photographer Galen Rowell.

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