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Updated Thu, February 2, 2012.
1251.o2.info.hu2100
1252.www.guanabios.org2090
1253.www.sunearthtools.com1990
1254.www.oersted.dtu.dk1970
1255.www.chemistrycentral.com1970
1256.www.populationmondiale.com1940
1257.geologia.altervista.org1940
1258.isrzone.blogspot.com1910
1259.www.phys.ntnu.no1890
1260.www.ideg.es1870
1261.www.ifa.au.dk1810
1262.splung.com1710
1263.www.neuropsy.it1670
1264.www.dsl.dk1610
1265.www.swissranking.com1560
1266.www.dibe.unige.it1540
1267.www.new4stroke.com1510
1268.krapivensky.webs.com1460
1269.www.its.tudelft.nl1430
1270.www.kando.hu1370
1271.www.img.ras.ru1340
1272.www.pmmf.hu1300
1273.rincondefermat.blogspot.com1290
1274.www.chemsnippets.com1210
1275.bav005.narod.ru1150
1276.energeticafutura.blogspot.com1100
1277.www.famous-philanthropists.org1080
1278.mattdegasperi.weebly.com1070
1279.www.philo.at1040
1280.www.sciencepostcards.com1020
1281.www.auroresboreales.com977
1282.ctn-rct.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca880
1283.www.com.unisi.ch736
1284.www.neuroingegneria.com662
1285.www.eurolore.de592
1286.informsecurity.webs.com589
1287.www.isolari.com582
1288.panelsolarhibrido.es543
1289.eveniafotovoltaico.blogspot.com515
1290.www.crimen.be502
1291.www.free-light.it356
1292.studentworldteacher.net337
1293.www.tchg.com325
1294.psicologiaargentina.blogspot.com322
1295.www.electricidad-gratuita.com297
1296.www.cc-solarreinigung.de262
1297.www.znaniya-sila.narod.ru182
1298.filishkevich.webs.com116
1299.www.caveromiranda.galeon.com113
1300.www.solarnews.es87
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1260. www.ideg.es

Rating: 1870 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.ideg.es' on the other websites

www.ideg.es

Institut de Geomàtica

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Skills shortage may jeopardise NBN: union
Australia's peak communications union has thrown a question mark over the Government's commitment to prioritise the regional rollout of the National Broadband Network (NBN).
abc.net.au
Second whale birth reported in Derwent
There have reports of another southern right whale being born in Hobart's River Derwent.
abc.net.au
Junking a Virtuous Bag
Some SunChips fans complained that a new bag's crinkly plant-based material was obnoxiously loud.
feeds.nytimes.com
Vital Signs: Surgical Errors Continue Despite Protocols
Though hospitals must follow a standard set of procedures, researchers found “catastrophic events” like a chest tube being put into the wrong lung, a healthy ovary being removed and the wrong vertebrae being fused.
feeds.nytimes.com
Antarctic ice reveals trapped secrets of climate change
Cores drilled from the icecap are going on show at London's Science Museum. The centuries-old information they contain could help scientists predict Earth's future weatherThey were found deep below Earth's surface, provide vital information about our climate's history and, for the first time, will be publicly displayed in their full freezing glory. Three pieces of ice core, drilled from the Antarctic icecap, one containing bubbles of air from the year 1410, will this week be installed in a glass-fronted freezer cabinet in the Science Museum in London's new Atmosphere gallery.Set for its opening by Prince Charles on Friday, the gallery has been designed to outline the basics of climate science and explain why researchers believe human activity is now having a pronounced impact on weather patterns. "This gallery will show how scientists have acquired their knowledge about Earth's climate history – with our ice cores providing some of the most telling examples," says museum director Chris Rapley.Air gets trapped by snow as it falls. Then more snow falls on top. Pressure builds up and snow is eventually converted into ice – with air bubbles trapped inside. The deeper you drill, the older the ice – and air bubbles – that you find. "If you drill several kilometres down you find samples that are almost a million years old," says Rapley. "That is why we think of ice cores as treasure troves of climate history."By drilling down to a particular layer, the oxygen isotopes in a core sample's air bubbles will tell you the global temperature for the time that the air was trapped in snowflakes. This temperature can then be compared with the air's carbon dioxide content. Similarly, salt and dust contamination provides information about sea levels and the spread of deserts across the globe at any given time over the last 800,000 years. Such information has been key to the prediction of future global weather patterns and will form an important background to this week's climate talks in Cancun, Mexico."The one critical feature we get from these measurements is that the temperature of Earth's atmosphere and its carbon dioxide content are locked together in a coupled system," adds Rapley. "If one of those variables increases, the other will also rise. Hence the worry about the amounts of carbon dioxide we pump into the atmosphere. If unchecked, these could lead to global temperature rises of up to six degrees Celsius by the end of the century."The Atmosphere gallery at the Science Museum, London SW7, is open opens to the public from Saturday, 4 DecemberClimate changeGlaciersAntarcticaMuseumsRobin McKieguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk