23/09/2023
The Night is dark but still one torch making some difference..
The AIES is all about Amity School of Environment, which keeps you updated with the Events, News art
23/09/2023
The Night is dark but still one torch making some difference..
Hello Amitians🌕 ....kaise ho sab ???
05/11/2017
Winners and losers of forest fragmentation Breaking up the rainforest into small, isolated patches is forcing more species to live at the forest edge and putting those that are dependent on the forest core at risk. Eighty-five percent of species are now being impacted by this forest fragmentation.
05/11/2017
Warm air helped make 2017 ozone hole smallest since 1988 Measurements from satellites this year showed the hole in Earth's ozone layer that forms over Antarctica each September was the smallest observed since 1988, scientists have announced.
03/11/2017
THE YUVA AWARDS -2K18
Those who are interested to take part in this Poster making event please contact Richa Mam...
02/11/2017
Dinosaur-killing asteroid impact cooled Earth's climate more than previously thought The Chicxulub asteroid impact that wiped out the dinosaurs likely released far more climate-altering sulfur gas into the atmosphere than originally thought, according to new research.
02/11/2017
Building a sustainable future: Urgent action needed We need to act urgently to increase the energy efficiency of our buildings as the world's emerging middle classes put increasing demands on our planet's energy resources.
02/11/2017
Greenhouse gas concentrations surge to new record Concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere surged at a record-breaking speed in 2016 to the highest level in 800,000 years, according to a new report. The abrupt changes in the atmosphere witnessed in the past 70 years are without precedent.
30/10/2017
KADVI HAWA - This is hilarious ... ONLY two Weather Summer & Winter ...... Rainy season for 3-4 Days.. must watch
Kadvi Hawa Trailer | Sanjai Mishra | Ranvir Shorey | 24 Nov 2017
30/10/2017
Zika virus infects developing brain by first infecting cells meant to defend against it: Discovery may explain how virus is transmitted from pregnant women to their unborn children Researchers report that the Zika virus is transmitted from mother to fetus by infected cells that, ironically, will later develop into the brain's first and primary form of defense against invasive pathogens.