Scientists at NSF's network of nine Critical Zone Observatories (CZOs) are addressing questions about the thin veneer of Earth's surface that extends from the top of the tree canopy to the base of weathered bedrock. The zone is critical because it's where fresh water flows, soil is formed and life flourishes. The critical zone provides most of the ecosystem services on which society depends.
	Part 1: Can Marcellus Shale Gas Development and Healthy Waterways Sustainably Coexist?
	National Science Foundation Sustainability Research Coordination Network is providing answers
	Part 2: A Tree Stands in the Sierra Nevada
	A coniferous view of the link between snowmelt and water supplies in the U.S. West
	Part 3: Science on the Graveyard Shift
	Discovering what gets buried and how
	Part 4: High-peak Creeks, Forest Fires and Landscape Erosion: Could They Be Linked?
	Colorado's Boulder Creek watershed: Where rushing streams, raging blazes and the Rockies meet
	Part 5: El Yunque, Majestic Rocky Icon of Puerto Rico: Impervious to the Ravages of Time?
	Anvil-shaped promontory formed inside an ancient supervolcano
	Part 6: Earth Week: The Search for White Gold--Snowmelt
	Thin snowpack puts ecosystems and water resources in critical condition
	Part 7: Trail of Fire Leads to Less Snow, Threatened Water Resources
	Scientists study New Mexico's Rabbit Mountain, where forests burned in the 2011 Las Conchas fire
	Part 8: Granite bedrock and sequoia forests 'communicate' in the Sierra Nevada
	Research reveals the coevolution of life and landscapes
	Part 9: On World Water Day, scientists peer into rivers to answer water availability questions
	NSF Critical Zone Observatory researchers study California's Eel River for insights into water losses
	Part 10: What's good for crops not always good for the environment
	Measure of age in soil nitrogen could help precision agriculture
	Part 11: NSF-supported scientists to present research results on Earth's critical zone at AGU fall meeting
	Topics range from the function of Earth's 'living skin' to interactions between climate and bedrock
	Part 12: NSF awards $1.35 million for new institute focused on Earth's critical zone: Where rock meets life
	Institute scientists will cross the boundaries of Earth's critical zone from tree canopy to groundwater base
	Part 13: NSF awards grants for four new critical zone observatories to study Earth surface processes
	Sites are in Southeast Piedmont; Southwest Idaho; Northern California; and Illinois-Iowa-Minnesota
	Part 14: Dust contributes valuable nutrients to Sierra Nevada forest ecosystems
	New research finding provides insight into role dust may play as ecosystems change
	Part 15: NSF awards grants for four new critical zone observatories to study Earth surface processes
	Sites are in Southeast Piedmont; Southwest Idaho; Northern California; and Illinois-Iowa-Minnesota
	Part 16: Can an ancient ocean shoreline set the stage for a tropical forest of today?
	Researchers at NSF Critical Zone Observatory and Long-Term Ecological Research sites are finding out.
	Part 17: Changes in non-extreme precipitation may have not-so-subtle consequences
	Analysis of more than five decades of data leads to new conclusions
	Part 18: NSF-supported scientists present research results on Earth's critical zone at 2017 AGU fall meeting
	Topics include Puerto Rico's Luquillo Critical Zone Observatory, wildfire in the critical zone, plants as plumbers and builders of the critical zone
	Part 19: Dust on the wind: Study reveals surprising role of dust in mountain ecosystems
	Southern Sierra Nevada forests rely on nutrients from windborne dust
	Part 20: Hidden “rock moisture” possible key to forest response to drought
	Underground rock reservoirs can hold significant amounts of water
	Part 21: On World Water Day, scientists study spawning salmon through a riverbed lens
	NSF Critical Zone Observatory researchers peer into North America’s West Coast salmon rivers
	Part 22: Billions of gallons of water saved by thinning forests
	Too many trees in Sierra Nevada forests stress water supplies, scientists say
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