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We are reaching temperatures above which man cannot live, warns expert

A climatologist has warned that the planet is now approaching temperatures which threaten human life.

  • Professor Szymon Malinowski (aldg) PAP/Roman Zawistowski
    Earth

    Only system-wide changes will save us from disaster, says climatology professor

    Personal attitudes towards climate change and private actions taken in relation to it show an individual's awareness and willingness to change on a larger scale, but they alone will not change much. Regulations and fundamental changes at a higher level are needed. We will not survive without system-wide changes, believes climatologist Professor Simon Malinowski.

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    Earth

    Baltic Sea is recovering, but it still needs protection, says oceanologist

    In recent decades, the Baltic Sea has begun to recover, but still contains unfavourable phenomena. Anaerobic deserts are growing, cyanobacterial blooms are intensifying, and underwater engineering works raise toxins from the bottom, which eventually end up in the food chain, says Dr. Lech Kotwicki from the Polish Academy of Sciences.

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    Human

    As of August 2, we are in ecological debt

    According to estimates, world consumption is equivalent to 1.7 of the planet's resources. August 2 is Earth Overshoot Day (also known as Ecological Debt Day), which 30 years ago fell on December 19. We throw away food, waste water and energy. And we should: refuse, reduce, reuse, recycle and rot, appeals the Institute of Environmental Protection.

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    Earth

    Geologist: There are 'singing' dunes in Słowiński National Park, but chances of hearing them are slim

    There are more than 30 places on Earth where you can hear 'singing' dunes. This phenomenon also occurs in the Słowiński National Park, but here the chances of hearing the sound are close to zero, says Dr. Szymon Ostrowski from the Polish Geological Institute - National Research Institute.

  • Tent camp on the shores of Lake Láddejávrre. Credit: Katarzyna Walczak
    Earth

    Geologists study growing continents

    The continents are still growing, moving and changing their shapes. Geologists from the AGH University of Science and Technology and the University of Wrocław study the mechanisms of their growth. Ancient islands are still waiting to be discovered. Scientists are tracking the traces of subduction - a process that occurs at the junction of lithospheric plates.

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    Life

    Scientists investigate whether soil of Małopolska landscape parks is PAH-free

    The analysis of the content of 10 different organic compounds belonging to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) in soils taken from protected areas (landscape parks in the Małopolska region) revealed that in a quarter of the tested samples the permissible levels were exceeded, causing a risk of particular importance for the protection of the soil surface.

  • Skalickie Skałki (Nowolesie gneisses). Credit: Paweł Derkowski/PGI-NRI
    Earth

    Geologist: The oldest studied rocks in Poland are about 600 million years old

    The gneisses of the Strzelin massif are probably the oldest surface rocks in Poland. However, there are still rocks in the country whose exact age is unknown, says Mateusz Szadkowski from the Lower Silesian Branch of the Polish Geological Institute-NRI.

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    Earth

    Polish researcher and NASA team study Antarctic meteorite

    Working on a lunar meteorite is a real scientific treat, says Professor Monika A. Kusiak, a geochemist and mineralogist from the Department of Polar and Marine Research of the Institute of Geophysics of the Polish Academy of Sciences. She is studying a meteorite found in Antarctica with a team of scientists from NASA and Korea.

  • Road damaged by flooding in Dili, East Timor, after tropical cyclone Seroja. April 6, 2021 EPA/ANTONIO DASIPARU
    Earth

    Polish researcher explains formation mechanisms of cyclone Seroja

    Equatorial tropical waves contributed to the formation of cyclone Seroja, which hit Indonesia in 2021. A cyclone in this area, close to land, is a rare phenomenon; it may be related to climate change, says Beata Latos, the first author of the publication in Nature Communications.

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  • Polish scientists reinterpret petroglyphs of Toro Muerto

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Boulder TM 1219 in a wider landscape perspective. Credit: A. Rozwadowski, source: Cambridge Archaeological Journal.

Polish scientists reinterpret petroglyphs of Toro Muerto

The geometric patterns, lines and zigzags that accompany the images of dancers (danzantes) carved in the rocks of the Peruvian Toro Muerto are not snakes or lightning bolts, but a record of songs - suggest Polish scientists who analyse rock art from 2,000 years ago.