New Study Locates Cleanest Air in the World

The coast of Antarctica. AFP file photo
The coast of Antarctica. AFP file photo
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New Study Locates Cleanest Air in the World

The coast of Antarctica. AFP file photo
The coast of Antarctica. AFP file photo

A new study conducted by the Colorado State University has defined the area that has the cleanest air in the world: the remote Southern Ocean that encircles Antarctica.

The swift climate change driven by human activities has left no area without pollution. But, Professor Sonia Kreidenweis and her team from the Department of Atmospheric Science suspected the air directly over the remote Southern Ocean won't be affected by pollution or contain aerosols produced by human activities or exported from remote lands.

During the study, the researchers examined the region by using the bacteria in the air over the Southern Ocean as a diagnostic tool.

The study was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal.

The researchers also examined the composition of airborne microbes captured from the ship they were on, and found that Antarctica appears to be isolated from microorganisms linked to aerosols, which makes it one of very few places on Earth that has been minimally affected by anthropogenic activities.

Using DNA sequencing, source tracking and wind back trajectories, the team determined the microbes' origins were marine, sourced from the oceans, suggesting aerosols from distant land masses and human activities, such as pollution or soil emissions driven by land use change, were not traveling south into Antarctic air.

These results counter all other studies from oceans in the subtropics and northern hemisphere, which found that most microbes came from upwind continents. But the diagnostic tool used in the study was decisive in validating the hypothesis of Kreidenweis and her team.

In a report published on the Colorado State University's website, research Thomas Hill, coauthor on the study, said: "The air over the Southern Ocean was so clean that there was very little DNA to work with."

"We treated the samples as precious items, taking exceptional care and using the cleanest technique to prevent contamination from bacterial DNA in the lab and reagents, so we can reach more accurate results," Hill added.



India’s Monsoon Back on Track, Heatwave to Ease, Says Weather Officials 

School children use umbrellas to cover themselves from the rain as they walk to school, in New Delhi, India May 2, 2025. (Reuters)
School children use umbrellas to cover themselves from the rain as they walk to school, in New Delhi, India May 2, 2025. (Reuters)
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India’s Monsoon Back on Track, Heatwave to Ease, Says Weather Officials 

School children use umbrellas to cover themselves from the rain as they walk to school, in New Delhi, India May 2, 2025. (Reuters)
School children use umbrellas to cover themselves from the rain as they walk to school, in New Delhi, India May 2, 2025. (Reuters)

India's monsoon has revived after stalling for more than a fortnight, and rains are set to cover central parts of the country this week, bringing relief from the heatwave in the grain-growing northern plains, two senior weather officials said on Monday.

The monsoon, the lifeblood of the country's nearly $4 trillion economy, delivers nearly 70% of the rain that India needs to water farms and replenish aquifers and reservoirs.

Nearly half of India's farmland, which has no irrigation, depends on the annual June-September rains for crop growth.

The monsoon has revived after a fortnight as a favorable weather system has developed in the Bay of Bengal, which would help the monsoon to cover entire central India this week, an official of the India Meteorological Department (IMD) told Reuters.

Monsoon rains on Monday covered almost the entire western state of Maharashtra and entered into neighboring Gujarat and central state of Madhya Pradesh, the official said.

The Monsoon's onset over Kerala occurred on May 24 and quickly covered southern, northeastern and some parts of western India ahead of its usual schedule, but its progress has stalled since May 29, according to an IMD chart that tracked the monsoon's progress.

The monsoon has gained the required momentum, and heavy rainfall is likely over west coast, central and some parts of north India in next ten days, which will significantly bring down temperatures, another weather official said.

India has received 31% lower rainfall than average in the first half of June, but in the second half the country is set to receive above average rainfall, the official said.

Monsoon rains are set to progress quickly in the next few days and could cover most parts of the country before the end of June, the official said.

Summer rains usually fall in Kerala around June 1 before spreading nationwide by mid-July, allowing farmers to plant crops such as rice, corn, cotton, soybeans and sugarcane.