Environment

More Stories in Environment

  1. Oceans

    Combining western science with Indigenous knowledge could help the Arctic

    Polar marine ecologist Marianne Falardeau investigates how Arctic ecosystems are shifting under climate change.

    By
  2. Plants

    A special shape shift helps a shrub thrive in blistering heat

    A microscope reveals an algae-like adaptation that might future-proof crop photosynthesis in extreme heat.

    By
  3. Environment

    How a Yurok family played a key role in the world’s largest dam removal project 

    In The Water Remembers, Amy Bowers Cordalis shares her family’s account of the Indigenous-led fight to restore the Klamath River in the Pacific Northwest.

    By
  4. Earth

    Recycled glass could help fend off coastal erosion

    Sand made from recycled glass can be mixed with sediment to make a medium for plants to grow in. That can help with coastal restoration projects.

    By
  5. Environment

    River turbulence can push toxic pollutants into the air

    Levels of hydrogen sulfide gas soared near a raging section of the Tijuana River in San Diego, exposing residents to potentially harmful air pollution.

    By
  6. Earth

    20 years after Hurricane Katrina, is the U.S. better prepared? 

    Hurricane forecasts have improved since Katrina, but risks from climate change and budget cuts loom.

    By
  7. Earth

    Useful metals get unearthed in U.S. mines, then they’re tossed

    Recovering these metals from mining by-products destined for waste sites could offset the need to import them from elsewhere or open new mines.

    By
  8. Environment

    A glacier burst, flooding Juneau. Again. This one broke records

    A warming climate is behind growing floods of glacier meltwater in Alaska’s capital. Scientists say it’s the new normal.

    By
  9. Environment

    See how aerosols loft through Earth’s sky

    Aerosols, small particles in the atmosphere like salt and dust, may offset a third of human-caused climate warming, though their influence is fading.

    By