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					<title>Newsique / Tags / Greenland</title>
					<language>en-us</language>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/tags/science/greenland/</link>
					<description>Get Informed. Choose Your News.</description>
								<item>
				<title>Oldest DNA Ever Recovered Suggests Earth Was Warmer</title>
				<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/oldest_dna_ever_recovered_sugges/</link>
				<description>Ancient Greenland was green. New Danish research has shown that it was covered in conifer forest and, like southern Sweden today, had a relatively mild climate. Eske Willerslev, a professor at Copenhagen University, has analysed the world’s oldest DNA,</description>
				<type>news</type>
				<category>science</category>
				<pubDate>2007-07-06 14:00:23</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.newsique.com/science/oldest_dna_ever_recovered_sugges/</guid>
				<source>
					<name>Physorg</name>
					<link>http://www.physorg.com/news102864888.html</link>
													<more_info>http://www.newsique.com/sources/physorg/</more_info>
								<credibility>91</credibility>
											</source>
				<rating>
					<rating>Interesting [16]</rating>
													<credibility>80</credibility>
											</rating>
				<submitter>
					<username>neoform</username>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/profiles/neoform/</link>
				</submitter>
				<comments>
					<count>0</count>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/oldest_dna_ever_recovered_sugges/#comments</link>
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					<item>
				<title>DNA reveals Greenland's lush past</title>
				<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/dna_reveals_greenlands_lush_past/</link>
				<description>Armies of insects once crawled through lush forests in a region of Greenland now covered by more than 2000m of ice.

DNA extracted from ice cores show that moths and butterflies were living in forests of spruce and pine in the area between 450,000 and 8</description>
				<type>news</type>
				<category>science</category>
				<pubDate>2007-07-06 09:16:10</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.newsique.com/science/dna_reveals_greenlands_lush_past/</guid>
				<source>
					<name>BBC News</name>
					<link>http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/2/hi/science/nature/6276576.stm</link>
													<more_info>http://www.newsique.com/sources/bbc_news/</more_info>
								<credibility>93</credibility>
											</source>
				<rating>
					<rating>Interesting [6]</rating>
													<credibility>90</credibility>
											</rating>
				<submitter>
					<username>neoform</username>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/profiles/neoform/</link>
				</submitter>
				<comments>
					<count>0</count>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/dna_reveals_greenlands_lush_past/#comments</link>
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			</item>
					<item>
				<title>Antarctic Glaciers' Sloughing Of Ice Has Scientists at a Loss</title>
				<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/antarctic_glaciers_sloughing_of/</link>
				<description>Some of the largest glaciers in Antarctica and Greenland are moving in unusual ways and are losing increased amounts of ice to the sea, researchers said yesterday.

Although the changes in Greenland appear to be related to global warming, it remains unc</description>
				<type>news</type>
				<category>science</category>
				<pubDate>2007-03-16 00:24:04</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.newsique.com/science/antarctic_glaciers_sloughing_of/</guid>
				<source>
					<name>Washington Post</name>
					<link>http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/03/15/AR2007031501063.html</link>
													<more_info>http://www.newsique.com/sources/washingtonpost/</more_info>
								<credibility>94</credibility>
											</source>
				<rating>
					<rating>Important [7]</rating>
													<credibility>100</credibility>
											</rating>
				<submitter>
					<username>neoform</username>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/profiles/neoform/</link>
				</submitter>
				<comments>
					<count>0</count>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/antarctic_glaciers_sloughing_of/#comments</link>
				</comments>
			</item>
					<item>
				<title>Glaciers Not On Simple, Upward Trend Of Melting</title>
				<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/glaciers_not_on_simple_upward_tr/</link>
				<description>Two of Greenland's largest glaciers shrank dramatically and dumped twice as much ice into the sea during a period of less than a year between 2004 and 2005. And then, less than two years later, they returned to near their previous rates of discharge. T</description>
				<type>news</type>
				<category>science</category>
				<pubDate>2007-02-22 10:00:11</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.newsique.com/science/glaciers_not_on_simple_upward_tr/</guid>
				<source>
					<name>Science Daily</name>
					<link>http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/02/070212182131.htm</link>
													<more_info>http://www.newsique.com/sources/sciencedaily/</more_info>
								<credibility>91</credibility>
											</source>
				<rating>
					<rating>Interesting [6]</rating>
													<credibility>90</credibility>
											</rating>
				<submitter>
					<username>neoform</username>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/profiles/neoform/</link>
				</submitter>
				<comments>
					<count>0</count>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/glaciers_not_on_simple_upward_tr/#comments</link>
				</comments>
			</item>
					<item>
				<title>Greenland's ice is melting, but it won't be a green land tomorrow</title>
				<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/greenlands_ice_is_melting_but_it/</link>
				<description>Greenland, that icy land that even the Vikings had trouble colonizing, plays a pretty crucial role when it comes to our planet's climate. Approximately 125,000 years ago, Earth was 3 to 5 degrees Celsius warmer on average than it is today, and sea leve</description>
				<type>news</type>
				<category>science</category>
				<pubDate>2007-02-20 17:44:11</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.newsique.com/science/greenlands_ice_is_melting_but_it/</guid>
				<source>
					<name>CNET</name>
					<link>http://news.com.com/2061-11128_3-6160463.html</link>
													<more_info>http://www.newsique.com/sources/cnet/</more_info>
								<credibility>92</credibility>
											</source>
				<rating>
					<rating>Interesting [8]</rating>
													<credibility>90</credibility>
											</rating>
				<submitter>
					<username>neoform</username>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/profiles/neoform/</link>
				</submitter>
				<comments>
					<count>0</count>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/greenlands_ice_is_melting_but_it/#comments</link>
				</comments>
			</item>
					<item>
				<title>Jaws Under Ice: Mysterious Arctic sharks found in Québec</title>
				<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/jaws_under_ice_mysterious_arctic/</link>
				<description>In the frigid, murky waters of the St. Lawrence River in Québec, UBC marine biologist and veterinarian Chris Harvey-Clark is painting a clearer picture of a mysterious predator that could be the longest-lived vertebrate on the planet.</description>
				<type>news</type>
				<category>science</category>
				<pubDate>2006-12-08 10:28:53</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.newsique.com/science/jaws_under_ice_mysterious_arctic/</guid>
				<source>
					<name>www.publicaffairs.ubc.ca</name>
					<link>http://www.publicaffairs.ubc.ca/ubcreports/2006/06dec07/jaws.html</link>
									</source>
				<rating>
					<rating>Amazing [10]</rating>
													<credibility>80</credibility>
											</rating>
				<submitter>
					<username>neoform</username>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/profiles/neoform/</link>
				</submitter>
				<comments>
					<count>1</count>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/jaws_under_ice_mysterious_arctic/#comments</link>
				</comments>
			</item>
					<item>
				<title>Greenland whale hunt 'commercial'</title>
				<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/greenland_whale_hunt_commercial/</link>
				<description>Animal welfare campaigners say Greenland's whaling, held under rules permitting subsistence hunting, has become too commercial in character.

The World Society for the Protection of Animals (WSPA) found that a quarter of last year's catch was traded for</description>
				<type>news</type>
				<category>science</category>
				<pubDate>2008-06-18 08:17:57</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.newsique.com/science/greenland_whale_hunt_commercial/</guid>
				<source>
					<name>BBC News</name>
					<link>http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/2/hi/science/nature/7458155.stm</link>
													<more_info>http://www.newsique.com/sources/bbc_news/</more_info>
								<credibility>93</credibility>
											</source>
				<rating>
					<rating>Under Rated [1]</rating>
									</rating>
				<submitter>
					<username>neoform</username>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/profiles/neoform/</link>
				</submitter>
				<comments>
					<count>0</count>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/greenland_whale_hunt_commercial/#comments</link>
				</comments>
			</item>
					<item>
				<title>New batch of walruses tagged</title>
				<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/new_batch_of_walruses_tagged/</link>
				<description>Ten walruses in Greenland have been fitted with satellite tags in a new bid to confirm whether the blubbery beasts spend their summers in Canada.

Last year, the same team tagged eight walruses in west Greenland; however, all but one of the sat-tags fai</description>
				<type>news</type>
				<category>science</category>
				<pubDate>2008-05-14 08:18:39</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.newsique.com/science/new_batch_of_walruses_tagged/</guid>
				<source>
					<name>BBC News</name>
					<link>http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/2/hi/science/nature/7388162.stm</link>
													<more_info>http://www.newsique.com/sources/bbc_news/</more_info>
								<credibility>93</credibility>
											</source>
				<rating>
					<rating>Under Rated [1]</rating>
									</rating>
				<submitter>
					<username>neoform</username>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/profiles/neoform/</link>
				</submitter>
				<comments>
					<count>0</count>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/new_batch_of_walruses_tagged/#comments</link>
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			</item>
					<item>
				<title>The meltdown of Greenland's way of life / In the Arctic, a shockingly sudden retreat of the ice is changing everything</title>
				<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/the_meltdown_of_greenlands_way_o/</link>
				<description>Seen from the air, Greenland's massive ice cap is clearly taking a beating.

Lakes and ponds of open water are scattered across its cracking surface, some feeding streams that vanish into moulins - drain-like cavities about 40 feet across that pierce th</description>
				<type>news</type>
				<category>science</category>
				<pubDate>2007-10-19 12:04:26</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.newsique.com/science/the_meltdown_of_greenlands_way_o/</guid>
				<source>
					<name>SF Gate</name>
					<link>http://feeds.sfgate.com/~r/sfgate/rss/feeds/news/~3/171956804/article.cgi</link>
													<more_info>http://www.newsique.com/sources/sfgate/</more_info>
								<credibility>95</credibility>
											</source>
				<rating>
					<rating>Under Rated [1]</rating>
									</rating>
				<submitter>
					<username>neoform</username>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/profiles/neoform/</link>
				</submitter>
				<comments>
					<count>0</count>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/the_meltdown_of_greenlands_way_o/#comments</link>
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			</item>
					<item>
				<title>Lone tagged walrus leads the way</title>
				<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/lone_tagged_walrus_leads_the_way/</link>
				<description>A lone walrus may be close to revealing where west Greenland's walruses spend their summer - much to the relief of a team studying the creatures' behaviour.

In April, the researchers attached eight satellite tags to walruses to track their journeys, on</description>
				<type>news</type>
				<category>science</category>
				<pubDate>2007-05-22 11:33:08</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.newsique.com/science/lone_tagged_walrus_leads_the_way/</guid>
				<source>
					<name>BBC News</name>
					<link>http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/2/hi/science/nature/6669951.stm</link>
													<more_info>http://www.newsique.com/sources/bbc_news/</more_info>
								<credibility>93</credibility>
											</source>
				<rating>
					<rating>Under Rated [1]</rating>
									</rating>
				<submitter>
					<username>neoform</username>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/profiles/neoform/</link>
				</submitter>
				<comments>
					<count>0</count>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/lone_tagged_walrus_leads_the_way/#comments</link>
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			</item>
					<item>
				<title>Greenland ice sheet shrinking fast: NASA</title>
				<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/greenland_ice_sheet_shrinking_fa/</link>
				<description>The vast sheet of ice that covers Greenland is shrinking fast, but still not as fast as previous research indicated, NASA scientists said on Thursday.</description>
				<type>news</type>
				<category>science</category>
				<pubDate>2006-10-20 14:14:50</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.newsique.com/science/greenland_ice_sheet_shrinking_fa/</guid>
				<source>
					<name>Reuters</name>
					<link>http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=scienceNews&amp;storyid=2006-10-19T211218Z_01_N19397848_RTRUKOC_0_US-ENVIRONMENT-GREENLAND.xml&amp;src=rss&amp;rpc=22</link>
													<more_info>http://www.newsique.com/sources/reuters/</more_info>
								<credibility>93</credibility>
											</source>
				<rating>
					<rating>Under Rated [1]</rating>
									</rating>
				<submitter>
					<username>neoform</username>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/profiles/neoform/</link>
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					<count>0</count>
					<link>http://www.newsique.com/science/greenland_ice_sheet_shrinking_fa/#comments</link>
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