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Updates every hour. Last Updated: 19-Jun-2026 23:15 ET (20-Jun-2026 03:15 GMT/UTC)
[Research article] Cyprus earth observation data cube towards water resource management in the context of climate crisis
Big Earth DataA new study published in Big Earth Data describes the development of the National Earth Observation Data Cube of Cyprus as a modern software-based infrastructure for efficiently storing, managing, and analyzing the rapidly growing volume of Earth observation data. It further demonstrates its value through a water resource monitoring case under the Mediterranean climate crisis and highlights the potential of semantic classification for more generalized and efficient environmental monitoring. An online platform has been developed and welcomes users to access the CEODC ecosystem at https://cypruscube.com/, while all tools and services are also integrated within the ERATOSTHENES Regional Exploitation Platform: https://rep.eratosthenes.org.cy/.
- Journal
- Big Earth Data
[Research Article] GeoJSON agents: A multi-agent LLM architecture for geospatial analysis—function calling vs. code generation
Big Earth DataA new study published in Big Earth Data proposes GeoJSON agents, a novel multi-agent large language model (LLM) framework for geospatial analysis that transforms natural language instructions into structured GeoJSON operations through function calling and code generation. Experiments on a hierarchical benchmark of 70 spatial tasks show that the code generation–based agent achieved 97.14% accuracy and the function calling–based agent achieved 85.71%, both significantly outperforming general-purpose models, while highlighting the trade-off between flexibility and execution stability in GeoAI applications. The data that support the findings of this study are openly available in figshare at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.29921492.
- Journal
- Big Earth Data
Microbes reveal missing link in space manufacturing
International Space Station U.S. National LaboratoryResearch sponsored by the International Space Station (ISS) National Laboratory shows that microgravity disrupts how engineered microbes absorb nutrients, limiting their ability to produce useful materials in space. Published in npj Microgravity, the study examined Escherichia coli engineered to produce melanin—a protective pigment that could help shield astronauts and spacecraft from radiation and environmental stress. While the microbes successfully activated the genetic pathway for melanin production, nutrient uptake was impaired in microgravity, leaving key resources unused. Complementary ground-based experiments confirmed that fluid mixing and nutrient transport are major challenges. In contrast, fungal strains tested in the study remained resilient and continued producing melanin, highlighting their potential for space-based biomanufacturing. The findings will inform the design of future bioreactors and systems to enable reliable production of protective materials, medicines, and other valuable compounds during long-duration missions.
Native plants dominate Guangzhou’s urban greenery: research reveals unique diversity patterns across subtropical city
South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences- Journal
- Biological Diversity
- Funder
- Guangdong Flagship Project of Basic and Applied Basic Research, Youth Innovation Promotion Association, National Natural Science Foundation of China
Could future Mars settlers print their own tools?
University of Arkansas- Journal
- Journal of Manufacturing and Materials Processing
Novel origami pattern turns flat sheets into load-bearing 3D technology
McGill University- Journal
- Nature Communications
- Funder
- Canada Research Chairs, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, McGill Engineering Doctoral Award, Fonds de recherche du Québec