What we can learn from the unique smell of wildfire smoke
First publishedJul 18, 21:20 UTC
Last updatedJul 19, 08:51 UTC · 9m ago
1 outlets over time — hover a bar for its window & outletslast updated

Answer
NPR's Adrian Ma speaks with Derek Mallia, professor University of Utah's Department of Atmospheric Sciences, about why wildfire smoke in the northeast has a distinctive smell.
Reported by 1 outlet — NPR Science. See all sources ↓
Read the full report at NPR Science ↗
Why it matters
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In brief
- What's the story?
- NPR's Adrian Ma speaks with Derek Mallia, professor University of Utah's Department of Atmospheric Sciences, about why wildfire smoke in the northeast has a distinctive smell.
- How widely is it covered?
- 1 outlet, average source rating 8.0/10.
- When was it last updated?
- 9m ago.
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- Coverage card1 outlet1CoverageScouting report
What we can learn from the unique smell of wildfire smoke
Sources1TypeCoverageNPR Science
Related in the knowledge graph
organizationAtmospheric SciencesorganizationDerek MalliaorganizationNPR's Adrian MaorganizationUniversityorganizationUtah's DepartmentorganizationWhat
Sources (1)
Avg source rating 8.0/10Processing cluster
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