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Showing results for: Climate Change (page 74)

In the Great Lakes, the pandemic disrupted sea lamprey control

REBECCA REDELMEIER
A cross-border program keeps sea lamprey populations at bay. But a two-year disruption was never part of the plan

This year’s hurricane season has been eerily quiet. Will it last?

Jake Bittle
The season is already near its peak, but climate change means a monster storm could strike anytime

Are Hawaii’s beach showers in violation of the Clean Water Act?

Jea Morris
According to a recent study, the facilities are a “point source” of sunscreen contamination and threaten coral reef

Trump fully embraces QAnon on Truth Social — hours after obsessed supporter allegedly killed wife

Areeba Shah
The FBI has labeled QAnon a domestic terror threat, but Trump is going all in on the conspiracy theory

Arizona’s Latino voters and political independents could spell midterm defeats for MAGA candidates

Gina Woodall
Republican leaders in Arizona have taken a hard right since Trump's election. Now it could cost them

The heat wave crushing the West is a preview of farmworkers’ hot future

Anne Marshall-Chalmers
By the end of the century, the San Joaquin Valley could endure two months of extreme heat every summer

How to garden through climate change

Naomi Starkman
British gardener Sally Morgan explains how diversity is the key to managing your garden through extreme weather

How Justice Scalia created chaos: “Originalism” is just right-wing ideology in disguise

Paul Rosenberg
Berkeley law school dean Erwin Chemerinsky on the incoherent, dishonest ideology that has warped the Supreme Court

Space agriculture boldly grows food where no one has grown before

Ajwal Dsouza, Thomas Graham
As access to space increases, the potential for terrestrial benefits directly tied to space exploration grow

California’s ban on gas-powered vehicles: Huge victory in the 50-year war for the electric car

Carl Pope
It took 50 years, but California clean-air regulators never surrendered — and the electric future is here

Not like udder milk: Synthetic dairy milk made without cows may be coming to a supermarket near you

Milena Bojovic
There have been increasing calls to move towards more sustainable forms of food production

Will America see a major renewal of the middle class? We know it can be done

Thom Hartmann
Don't despair! We may be at a crucial hinge of history, like the one FDR faced in 1933. A new era is waiting

“This is where WW III starts”: “The Grab” filmmaker on the urgent scarcity created by the powerful

Gary M. Kramer
"Blackfish" director Gabriela Cowperthwaite told Salon about her new doc investigating those grabbing up resources

Glaciers and “zombie ice”: The planet is melting at both ends, research finds

Matthew Rozsa
A pair of new studies suggests how sea level rise will play out on Earth

America is finally waking up to the fascist danger: Let’s hope it’s not too late

Chauncey DeVega
Americans see the threat to democracy at last. But it's no time to celebrate: The Trumpists aren't beaten yet

How deranged anti-Obama conspiracy theories led America to Donald Trump

Kathryn Joyce
Folklorist Patricia Turner on how unhinged right-wing paranoia about the first Black president tore America apart

Meet the “outcast rats”: Those viral, ostentatious city rats are weird loners in their rat world 

Pamela Appea
A rat researcher explains why the wild rats you tend to see in public are typically "disenfranchised rats"

The true story of when Congress almost released wild hippos into the Louisiana bayou

Matthew Rozsa
Congress was one vote away from passing the hippo bill. Experts weigh in on what could have been

We need more protected areas, but that’s not all

Tara Lohan
New research supports efforts to designate more land and water to save biodiversity and fight climate change

The steep decline in US life expectancy raises questions most politicians want to avoid

Bob Hennelly
The worst decline in a century reveals our for-profit healthcare system for what it really is

A rat’s world map could hold the key to curing diseases of the brain

Pamela Appea
Rats may have a better sense of direction than humans. Researchers are still trying to figure out how

Jane Fonda diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma

Kelly McClure
"A very treatable cancer ... so I feel very lucky," says Fonda

Environmentalists blast New Jersey environmental bureau’s decision to let dead vultures rot

Bob Hennelly
New Jersey officials are choosing to let rotting vultures lie. Experts are horrified at the risk of a new bird flu

With more sizzling summers, Colorado changes how heat advisories are issued

Markian Hawryluk
Colorado’s climate is so dry that reaching the thresholds for a heat advisory is nearly impossible
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