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Clues in Caves Suggest Drought May Have Brought Down India's Mughal Empire

Clues in Caves Suggest Drought May Have Brought Down India's Mughal Empire
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Arabian Sea , India General , Fatehpur Sikri , Indian Ocean , Proceedings Of The National Academy Sciences , Creative Commons , National Academy , Mughal Empire , Guge Kingdom , Mawmluh Cave ,

The world's wettest place in North East India is witnessing a decline in rainfall


The world’s wettest place in North East India is witnessing a decline in rainfall
The phenomenon is driven by changes in the Indian Ocean temperature and conversion of forestlands and vegetation cover to croplands in the last two decades.
Representational image.
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Diptendu Dutta / AFP
An analysis of 119 years of rainfall measurements at different rain gauge stations across North East India, has revealed a decreasing trend in summer rainfall since 1973, including in rainy Meghalaya, reputed for hosting the world’s wettest place.
The study has said that the decline in rainfall is driven by changes in the Indian Ocean temperature and conversion of forestlands and vegetation cover to croplands in the last two decades. These long-term rainfall changes in the region are responsible for the observed shift of the world’s wettest place from Cherrapunji to Mawsynram (separated by 15-km) in recent decades. Mawsynram receives an average annual ....

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Marking the Anthropocene


The idea that we’re in a human-influenced geological epoch is gaining traction, but how will future geologists measure it? Rachel Brazil finds out
The idea for the Anthropocene came from a chemist – the Nobel prize-winning atmospheric chemist Paul Crutzen, who sadly died on 28 January this year. In 2000 he suggested that we are now in a new geological epoch, marked by the activities of humans. The idea caught the attention of the media and wider academic community because it so well encapsulated the changes that have led to our current climate crisis. But Crutzen’s statement also chimed with some geologists, who started to consider whether there really was a case for formally defining a new unit within the geological time scale. Since 2009 they have been searching for the chemical signals that would mark this new epoch. ....

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