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Showing results for: Climate Change (page 60)

A secret weapon in preventing the next pandemic: Fruit bats

Jim Robbins
Bats worldwide are primary vectors for virus transmission from animals to humans

Bizarre deep sea microbes hint at a rich, under-explored suite of ocean life

Troy Farah
By studying bacteria that thrive without sun, scientists are learning more about the history of evolution of life

Which planets – and planetary moons – could actually have life?

Matthew Rozsa
How close could aliens be? These are the prospects that meet the specific conditions for life to be possible

Minnesota to require 100% carbon-free electricity by 2040

Zoya Teirstein
Utilities can use a mix of solar, wind, hydropower, nuclear, hydrogen power, and biomass to meet the 2040 goal

Even with legal protections, extreme heat and wildfire take a toll on farmworkers

Blanca Begert
Nearly half of workers in California say their farms are not in compliance with safety codes for extreme weather

How the Supreme Court could finally force Big Oil to face trial

Kate Yoder
Dozens of cities and states sued oil giants for deceiving the public. The Supreme Court could soon intervene

How living on Mars would warp the human body

Troy Farah
Cold, bathed in radiation and far from Earth, life on Mars would strain our mental and bodily limits

Report: Burning gas in oil fields cost tribes $22 million

Maria Parazo Rose
How poor methane rules are costing tribes and taxpayers

More than 75% of global insect species not adequately protected

Brett Marsh
Bugs need conservation areas too

Climate denial campaign goes retro with new textbook

Blanca Begert
"The 1990s called. They want their scientific misinformation back"

Six foods that climate change is going to ruin

Matthew Rozsa
Some of the most common crops, like corn and coffee, are already suffering as the Earth warms

GOP mocked Al Gore as “Ozone Man”: But he was right the whole time — and they knew it

Carl Pope
There's amazing good news about the ozone layer — and a crucial object lesson for addressing the climate crisis

There’s a deal to save the Colorado River — if California doesn’t blow it up

Jake Bittle
The plan would cut water use on the river by roughly a quarter, drying up farms and subdivisions in the Southwest

How this laughable sci-fi flick embarrassed Hollywood into doing better science

Matthew Rozsa
"This is the worst example of what Hollywood does to science," says one expert about this notoriously absurd movie

The Doomsday Clock is an imperfect metaphor — but the existential danger is all too real

Émile P. Torres
Critics call the clock a scare-mongering device — but the problem is, we have good reasons to fear extinction

A weeknight soufflé that’s even faster than the Stouffer’s classic

Mary Elizabeth Williams
This spinach soufflé can be made with no fear — or any special equipment

Idaho Republican wants kids to “work to earn” their school lunch

Brad Reed
Idaho State Rep. Ron Mendive pitched solving local schools' budget problems by putting students to work

Death in Memphis: Racism, dehumanization and the corrosion of America

Brian Karem
I've covered the police on and off for 40 years. I've never seen anything like the killing of Tyre Nichols

Auckland drenched by New Zealand’s wettest month on record

Avery Schuyler Nunn
The nation’s prime minister attributes the torrential rain and flooding to climate change

Tired of being told to “adapt,” an Indigenous community wrote its own climate action plan

Carly Graf
On the Flathead Reservation, a living document speaks to thousands of years of history while facing new challenges

Here’s how we fell in (and out of) love with bacon

Joy Saha
The "bacon mania" of the 2010s has spurred a new kind of appreciation for salt-cured pork today
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