American Geophysical Union (AGU) Publications

This site is a scientific journal publishing research articles in the fields of atmospheric and hydrospheric sciences. It covers topics such as climate science, atmospheric chemistry, and planetary magnetism. The articles are written by researchers from around the world and undergo rigorous peer review before publication.

99%

The Daily's Verdict

This news site is known for its high journalistic standards. It strives to maintain neutrality and transparency in its reporting, and avoids conflicts of interest. It has a reputation for accuracy and rarely gets contradicted on major discrepancies in its reporting.

Bias

100%

Examples:

No current examples available.

Conflicts of Interest

100%

Examples:

No current examples available.

Contradictions

97%

Examples:

  • The eruption actually contributed to cooling the Earth, similar to other major volcanic events
  • The eruption injected significant amount of water vapor into the tropical Southern Hemisphere mid-stratosphere

Deceptions

100%

Examples:

No current examples available.

Recent Articles

  • Unprecedented Volcanic Eruption Cooled Earth in 2022, Challenging Global Warming Assumptions

    Unprecedented Volcanic Eruption Cooled Earth in 2022, Challenging Global Warming Assumptions

    Broke On: Saturday, 15 January 2022 In January 2022, the Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai volcano erupted, injecting large amounts of water vapor and volcanic aerosols into the stratosphere. Contrary to initial assumptions, this event led to cooling rather than warming of the Earth by reducing solar radiative forcing and increasing stratospheric water content. The researchers' analysis revealed that more energy left the climate system than entered it during this period.
  • NASA's Cryobots and Juno Spacecraft Shed Light on Ocean Worlds

    Broke On: Tuesday, 14 November 2023 NASA is studying cryobots to explore ocean worlds like Europa and Enceladus. NASA's Juno spacecraft has found evidence of organic compounds on Jupiter's moon Ganymede, suggesting the possibility of an underground ocean.