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Showing 1–50 of 57 results
Advanced filters: Author: Heike Langenberg Clear advanced filters
  • A glimpse at the deep past hints that carbon dioxide might not always have caused global warming, reports Heike Langenberg.

    • Heike Langenberg
    News
    Nature
  • The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is fostering collaborations and emphasizing input from developing countries, says Heike Langenberg.

    • Heike Langenberg
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature
    Volume: 417, P: 4-6
  • Earth's climate depends strongly on clouds. But what really goes on within these layered structures? Heike Langenberg reports on two satellites that aim to find out.

    • Heike Langenberg
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 437, P: 468-469
  • Economists have calculated the cheapest way out of the climate dilemma.

    • Heike Langenberg
    News
    Nature
    • Heike Langenberg
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature
    Volume: 410, P: 850
    • Heike Langenberg
    News & Views
    Nature
    Volume: 415, P: 594
    • Heike Langenberg
    News & Views
    Nature Geoscience
    Volume: 4, P: 822
    • Heike Langenberg
    News & Views
    Nature Geoscience
    Volume: 3, P: 822
    • Heike Langenberg
    News & Views
    Nature Geoscience
    Volume: 1, P: 816
    • Heike Langenberg
    News & Views
    Nature Geoscience
    Volume: 3, P: 389
  • Icebergs could represent a source of fresh water to arid lands, if they wandered from the coast of Antarctica. A new simulation provides some answers and raises more questions about iceberg movements.

    • Heike Langenberg
    News & Views
    Nature
    Volume: 413, P: 693
  • A study of atmospheric transport shows that, at certain times of the year, a large part of the air arriving in Asia has passed over Europe, perhaps carrying pollution from one continent to the other. Analyses of atmospheric composition will be needed to confirm or disprove the possibility.

    • Heike Langenberg
    News & Views
    Nature
    Volume: 407, P: 140
  • The powerful Gulf Stream carries warm water from the Caribbean to Europe. Satellite images have tracked an unusual, cold plume of water from the American coast that traversed the Stream in October 2001.

    • Heike Langenberg
    News & Views
    Nature
    Volume: 418, P: 928
    • Heike Langenberg
    Editorial
    Nature
    Volume: 419, P: 187
    • Heike Langenberg
    News & Views
    Nature Geoscience
    Volume: 4, P: 140
    • Heike Langenberg
    News & Views
    Nature Geoscience
    Volume: 2, P: 607
    • Heike Langenberg
    News & Views
    Nature Geoscience
    Volume: 1, P: 420
    • Heike Langenberg
    News & Views
    Nature Geoscience
    Volume: 2, P: 542
  • How small-scale (10–25-km diameter) spiral structures are created on the sea surface is poorly understood. From a study of 400 photographs of such spirals taken from space, it seems that turbulence generated at the boundary of two water masses in relative motion is often the driving force.

    • Heike Langenberg
    News & Views
    Nature
    Volume: 405, P: 901
    • Helene Schulze
    • Heike Langenberg
    News & Views
    Nature Geoscience
    Volume: 7, P: 553
    • Heike Langenberg
    News & Views
    Nature Geoscience
    Volume: 1, P: 644
  • Although the climate on Venus is very different from that on Earth, many features of the two planets' atmospheric circulations and their lightning regimes are more similar than we thought.

    • Heike Langenberg
    Research Highlights
    Nature Geoscience
    P: 1
  • Near slow-spreading oceanic ridges, hydrothermal vent fluids can take an express loop guided by shallow-angle faults in the oceanic crust.

    • Heike Langenberg
    Research Highlights
    Nature Geoscience
    P: 1
  • The Queen Anne churches in east London were precisely aligned on an east–west axis.

    • Heike Langenberg
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 433, P: 687
  • Over the Sargasso Sea, polluted air coming from North America is richer in biologically available iron than dusty air from the Sahara, which has potential implications for ocean productivity.

    • Heike Langenberg
    Research Highlights
    Nature Geoscience
    P: 1
  • In each of the three main ocean basins, dense water from around Antarctica circulates in the bottom layers, and in the Atlantic ocean, an upper circulation cell that is driven from the north caps the bottom loop.

    • Heike Langenberg
    Research Highlights
    Nature Geoscience
    P: 1
    • Heike Langenberg
    News & Views
    Nature Geoscience
    Volume: 1, P: 88
    • Heike Langenberg
    News & Views
    Nature Geoscience
    Volume: 1, P: 496