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" ... Being net positive to nature includes air (pollution, particulates and atmospheric composition), water (pollution, toxic algae blooms and healing hydrology), soil (the amount of topsoil and its viability to support life) and biodiversity. Throughout the Industrial Revolution, nature has already been saving us. It has absorbed 1.2 trillion tons of carbon dioxide that we put into the atmosphere. But there's 1 trillion left up there, leading to massive climate destabilization. Nature has the capacity, through terrestrial soils, to absorb about ten times that capacity. By improving carbon soil sequestration, or by planting a trillion trees sequestering a ton of carbon each, you could pay off the entire debt. ... "
" ... Commenting the review, Paula Harrison, principal natural capital scientist at the UK Centre for ecology and hydrology, said it “highlights how protecting and enhancing both biodiversity and economic prosperity can be achieved simultaneously by rebalancing our demand for nature’s goods and services with its capacity to supply them.” ... "
" ... The administration may be slightly revised, because today adhering to regulatory requirements is more and more important for all winemakers, and such administration requires more personnel. To improve wine quality we change some details according to the vintage to make improvements, but the terroir will not change, even though the climate may change—but very slowly. Ausone will remain Ausone with its style. I don’t see how the hand of humans can change terroir—that would be difficult. Terroir is the conjunction of wind currents, sunshine and stability of soils linked to hydrology. I don’t see how we could change it. ... "
" ... These discoveries were revolutionary, resulting not only in over 30,000 publications, but also in the development of more sustainable approaches to water management. Lasting 3 times longer than expected, the GRACE mission transformed scientific understanding in the fields of hydrology, glaciology, oceanography, and geology by producing gravitational maps over 1000 times more accurate than any of its predecessors. GRACE data also was used to better understand how shifts in mass affect Earth's rotational speed and axis. Thanks to GRACE, a 250 million-year-old impact crater, the Wilkes Land crater, was discovered buried beneath the ice in East Antarctica in 2006. GRACE observations were even used to test frame-dragging, an effect of Einstein's Theory of General Relativity on space-time. From meteorology to relativistic physics, GRACE's legacy is a far-reaching, robust scientific achievement. ... "
" ... “Wetlands don’t necessarily look like swamps,” Lance says. “Through the scientific observation, analysis and calculations of three key metrics, hydrology, vegetation and soil, a wetland scientist is able to make a recommendation on whether or not a property contains wetlands that would fall under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. ... "