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Showing results for: Climate Change (page 20)

It’s still Jesus or Jimmy: How Green Day’s “American Idiot” speaks to a new generation

Megan Volpert
We're still walking along that boulevard of broken dreams 20 years later

Saturn-like ring may have once encircled Earth, study finds

Rae Hodge
Researchers found evidence of asteroid debris belt in our planet's early history

Will climate change bring an end to America’s world order?

Alfred McCoy
America's global hegemony is in rapid, irreversible decline. But what happens after that?

Federal plans to open up the desert for massive solar farms has angered environmentalists

Matthew Rozsa
Bureau of Land Management just revealed an ambitious plan for renewable energy. So why are environmentalists upset?

It’s now all fiction. Donald Trump destroyed reality

Brian Karem
Republicans are openly proud of their lies — but our disdain for the truth is bipartisan

An Alabama principal lost her job after she came out. Her conservative community rallied around her

Laura Pappano, The Hechinger Report
Lauren Dressback's firing caused a statewide outcry

A landslide rang Earth like a gong for over a week. Climate change made it possible

Rae Hodge
The collapse of a glacier in Greenland caused a tsunami that was felt around the world for nine days

Superbugs predicted to kill 39 million people by 2050, study finds

Rae Hodge
New research in The Lancet underscores our growing antibiotic resistance crisis

Food is a huge source of methane emissions. Fixing that is no easy feat.

Frida Garza
"The way we eat, and the way we dispose of food, play a huge role in humanity's growing methane problem"

Nearly 200 people were killed last year protecting the environment

Taylar Dawn Stagner
Most were Black or Indigenous

AOC is right: Jill Stein’s campaign is not serious

Rahna Epting
For democracy’s sake, the Green Party must grow. Stein won’t do it in 2024

Genetic analysis of Neanderthal named for Tolkien character reveals history of inbreeding

Matthew Rozsa
A recent genetic study on Thorin the Neanderthal's DNA revealed 50,000 years of isolation and inbreeding

Kamala Harris is making climate action patriotic. It just might work

Kate Yoder
A new study suggests that framing the issue in terms of American values holds promise

Harris may have “won” the debate, but Americans “lost on fracking,” climate experts say

Matthew Rozsa
Climate change scientists reacting to the Harris-Trump debate say we can't keep propping up fossil fuels

Death toll from Typhoon Yagi rises to at least 226 people in Vietnam

Matthew Rozsa
Climate change is increasing the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events like typhoons, experts say

How to sell an ‘ugly’ vegetable? Give it googly eyes

Ayurella Horn-Muller
"Giving irregular-looking fruits and vegetables a personality could make them more appealing to consumers . . . "

Indigenous groups design California’s newest marine sanctuary where offshore oil drilling is banned

Matthew Rozsa
“This is a huge moment for the Chumash People and all who have tirelessly supported our campaign over the years.”

“Every single family has been touched by this”: “#Untruth” director Dan Partland diagnoses Trumpism

Melanie McFarland
Salon talks to the director of the "#Unfit" sequel about why Trumpism and misinformation continue to proliferate

New research forecasts a future of freakier weather, but experts say the risks may be downplayed

Matthew Rozsa
Burning fossil fuels will cause extreme weather to worsen, bringing stronger hurricanes and floods

Revolt of the capybaras: Have these large rodents taken over — or reclaimed what’s theirs?

Nikolas Kozloff
Climate change and a lack of predators has moved capybaras into suburbs and gardens. Are they pests or heroes?

How climate change is expanding the reach of EEE, a rare and deadly mosquito-borne illness

Zoya Teirstein
Eastern equine encephalitis, a mosquito-borne disease with a high mortality rate, has been spreading

Earth has endured its hottest summer ever recorded — for the second year in a row

Matthew Rozsa
The planet was ravaged by wildfires, droughts and other extreme weather because of the unprecedented heat

Bureaucracy is despised for inefficiency and waste. But it might just save us from climate change

Matthew Rozsa
Despite attacks on bureaucracies, experts agree such organizations are more important than ever

Tackling food insecurity needs more than charity — governments must also act

Myriam Durocher, Annika Walsh, Irena Knezevic, Madison Hynes
What it means to move "beyond charity" when it comes to battling food insecurity
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