Monitoring Earth’s tilt can help scientists track how groundwater movement influences climate and can guide conservation efforts to address rising sea levels and other climate challenges.
Picture this: every time you use water from your tap, you’re inadvertently influencing our Earth’s rotational tilt and climate change. Strange, and not a good thing, but true. Our planet is a dynamic ...
Despite Earth's rotational pole changing quite frequently, there's one cause that has the biggest impact. Turns out that pumping groundwater has a pretty big impact on our planet's tilt and rotation. ...
The planet continuing to tilt is because humans are pumping and moving an obscene amount of groundwater across the planet and redistributing it, according to the study's press release.
The study has been published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters. The change in Earth's tilt is equal to .24 inches of sea level rise, according to Popular Mechanics. "Earth's rotational ...
You are most likely contributing to the earth’s shifting rotation tilting, just because you use your sink. A study by researchers in South Korea found that the earth has rotated 31.5 inches in ...
Mount Everest is the tallest mountain in the world. Impressive as that is, there is plenty more to know about Everest. Think about this for a minute: The top of the mountain is covered with limestone ...
When humans pump groundwater, it has a substantial impact on the tilt of Earth’s rotation. Additionally, a study documents just how much of an influence groundwater pumping has on climate change.
AI’s rate of progress is hitting a wall. It may not matter. That was the prevailing theme from this week’s Cerebral Valley AI Summit in San Francisco — a gathering of about 350 CEOs ...