Trump’s EPA Plans to Stop Collecting Greenhouse Gas Emissions Data From Most Polluters
“This is just putting our heads in the sand.”
“This is just putting our heads in the sand.”
Online connections fray social fabric argues Nicholas Carr in his new book.
With destroyed infrastructure and limited control of energy supplies, Palestinians need off-grid options like solar to rebuild.
How deadwood plays an outsized role in supporting fungi, bacteria, insects and other life forms.
We need new science organizations that are resilient to political interference.
A new study shows maple seeds’ unique spinning motion allows them to travel far, even in the rain.
Thousands of orphan oil and gas wells are polluting groundwater. Allocated funds to clean them up is not being distributed.
As wolves stun scientists with their dietary adaptability, they’re changing plants and animals along Alaska’s coastline.
Problem: Insect-borne disease. Solution: Genetically engineer males to implant toxic semen in females. Issues: Noted.
The $300 million lawsuit aimed at anyone who might consider participating in a protest.
California is looking to protect consumers from electricity rate hikes that subsidize data centers.
As the cost of extracting resources exceeds the benefits of using them, the future will be localized.
On a decimated block in Altadena, a single structure survived the wildfires: a SuperAdobe dome.
The destruction of USAID will create shockwaves throughout the world — and worsen the ongoing climate and extinction crises.
The philosopher Susana Monsó asks what we can know from the variety of responses toward death we see in the animal kingdom.
“Reparations is about repair and creating a world where everybody, including Black people, fully belong. A world where we respect the environment. And a world where the idea of dominating other groups or the land itself isn’t the dominant belief.”
Remembering the remarkable connection made between lens, spirit and the natural world.
Among the schlock of AI generated imagery is an eclectic and sometimes electric visual language.
While western medicine went all-in on antibiotics, scientists in the Soviet Union explored microbe battling viruses.
In 2022, President Biden announced a new effort to protect old growth forests. Logging continues. The Bureau of Land Management ignored the memo.
Climate tech is interesting but we need natural solutions to mitigate the effects of climate change.
How a beloved Indonesian dish shows how fungal fermentation can help us salvage food waste.
Climate change is pushing more and more mosquitoes to take humans as their preferred hosts.
Indigenous peoples in the United States lost 99 percent of their land through colonization.
Like canaries in coal mines, eels in our waterways can warn us about present hazards and those to come.
Western States opposed tribes’ access to the Colorado River 70 years ago. History Is repeating itself.
Tree Dance explores the intersection of ecology, technology and culture.
Hello,
I’m traveling through the end of the month and won’t be posting.
I will be preparing for an actual Tree Dance launch so I can hit the ground running when I’m back.
Thank you for the kind words and feedback you’ve provided over the last three months as we soft-launched the site.
I’m excited to see what happens once we actually get going. I thank you for your company as we begin this journey – Michael