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Ban wants U.S. to debate climate change
Mar 1 2007 11:40PM (CT)
UNITED NATIONS (AP) - Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon expressed hope Thursday that the "active debate" in the U.S. administration and Congress on global warming will spur the United States to take a leadership role in combatting climate change.
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Science team to search Gulf of Mexico
Mar 1 2007 11:11PM (CT)
GALVESTON, Texas (AP) - Famed undersea explorer Robert Ballard is leading a team of scientists heading into the Gulf of Mexico for a weeklong examination of Texas' ancient shoreline to see if anybody may have lived there.
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Science team to search Gulf of Mexico
Mar 1 2007 11:11PM (CT)
GALVESTON, Texas (AP) - Famed undersea explorer Robert Ballard is leading a team of scientists heading into the Gulf of Mexico for a weeklong examination of Texas' ancient shoreline to see if anybody may have lived there.
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Science team to search Gulf of Mexico
Mar 1 2007 11:11PM (CT)
GALVESTON, Texas (AP) - Famed undersea explorer Robert Ballard is leading a team of scientists heading into the Gulf of Mexico for a weeklong examination of Texas' ancient shoreline to see if anybody may have lived there.
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Gore talks global warming in Oklahoma
Mar 1 2007 10:24PM (CT)
NORMAN, Okla. (AP) - Former Vice President Al Gore told Oklahomans on Thursday that dire environmental consequences will result if changes are not made to reduce the amount of greenhouse gases that humans put into the air and sea.
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Gore talks global warming in Oklahoma
Mar 1 2007 10:24PM (CT)
NORMAN, Okla. (AP) - Former Vice President Al Gore told Oklahomans on Thursday that dire environmental consequences will result if changes are not made to reduce the amount of greenhouse gases that humans put into the air and sea.
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Gore talks global warming in Oklahoma
Mar 1 2007 10:24PM (CT)
NORMAN, Okla. (AP) - Former Vice President Al Gore told Oklahomans on Thursday that dire environmental consequences will result if changes are not made to reduce the amount of greenhouse gases that humans put into the air and sea.
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Dazzling new Saturn images released
Mar 1 2007 9:59PM (CT)
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - The international Cassini spacecraft has beamed back to Earth never-before-seen angles of Saturn from high above and below its majestic rings. The planet is fully surrounded by the rings in images released Thursday by NASA.
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Greek archaeologists find Hera statue
Mar 1 2007 9:57PM (CT)
THESSALONIKI, Greece (AP) - A 2,200-year-old statue of the goddess Hera has been found in a wall of a city under Mount Olympus, mythical home of Greece's ancient gods, archaeologists announced Thursday.
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Hawking to make zero gravity flight
Mar 1 2007 7:35PM (CT)
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - Renowned theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking, who authored the best-selling book, "A Brief History of Time," soon will experience a brief history with weightlessness.
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Rare gorilla birth recorded in Congo
Mar 1 2007 7:35PM (CT)
DAKAR, Senegal (AP) - Conservationists on Thursday announced the birth of a rare mountain gorilla in eastern Congo, where rebels have been accused of killing and eating the endangered animals.
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Scientists watch polar areas for changes
Mar 1 2007 7:34PM (CT)
PARIS (AP) - Are we really heading for an ice-free Arctic? More than 50,000 researchers hope to find an answer during a massive study of how global warming and other phenomena are changing the coldest parts of the Earth _ and what that means for the rest of it.
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Eyewalls may predict hurricane changes
Mar 1 2007 7:34PM (CT)
WASHINGTON (AP) - Watching for changes in the inner eyewall of a hurricane may help forecasters overcome one of their most perplexing challenges: predicting sudden strengthening or weakening. The ability to predict what path a hurricane will follow has improved dramatically in recent years, but anticipating sudden changes in intensity has remained a problem.
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Inuits blame U.S. for climate change
Mar 1 2007 3:03AM (CT)
WASHINGTON (AP) - As the world's largest emitter of greenhouse gases, the United States has come under heavy criticism, including from people who live almost on top of the world.
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