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Environment

  • Red Tide Is Plaguing Beaches on Both of Florida’s Coasts
    Red Tide Is Plaguing Beaches on Both of Florida’s Coasts
    October 4, 2018 | By The Associated Press
    Many of Florida’s famous beaches were empty on Oct. 4 because of a red tide outbreak that for the first time in decades is plaguing both the Gulf and Atlantic coasts at once. While the Gulf Coast has suffered the brunt of the toxic algae outbreak all summer, it only just showed up this week […]
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  • Another Rare Fish Pulled Back From Extinction
    Another Rare Fish Pulled Back From Extinction
    October 4, 2018 | By Reuters
    Another rare Colorado River fish has been pulled back from the brink of extinction, wildlife officials said Oct. 4, the second comeback in 2018 for a species unique to the Southwestern U.S. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service recommended reclassifying the ancient and odd-looking Razorback Sucker from endangered to threatened, meaning it is still at […]
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  • EPA Proposes Relaxing Methane Leak Rules, in Boon to Fracking
    EPA Proposes Relaxing Methane Leak Rules, in Boon to Fracking
    September 12, 2018 | By Petr Svab
    The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has proposed loosening regulations on methane leaks in the oil and gas industry. The new rules would save the industry hundreds of millions with only a marginal increase in greenhouse gas emissions and air pollutants. The change would give more breathing room to the hydraulic fracking industry, which has dominated […]
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  • Sharks Eat Their Greens, Too—First Omnivorous Species Confirmed
    Sharks Eat Their Greens, Too—First Omnivorous Species Confirmed
    September 6, 2018 | By Mimi Nguyen Ly
    Not all sharks feed only on meat—at least one shark species also feeds on seagrass. Scientists have confirmed that one of the most common sharks in the world is an omnivore. The bonnethead shark, a relative of the much larger hammerhead shark, munches on seagrass for about 60 percent of its diet and has a […]
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  • Scientists Seek New Ways to Combat Florida’s Growing ‘Red Tide’
    Scientists Seek New Ways to Combat Florida’s Growing ‘Red Tide’
    August 16, 2018 | By Reuters
    Scientists in Florida are on the cusp of developing promising methods to control toxic algae blooms like the “red tide” that has been killing marine life along a 150-mile stretch of the Gulf Coast, the head of a leading marine lab said on Aug. 15. Michael Crosby, president and chief executive of the Mote Marine […]
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  • International Bird Rescue Reporting Starving Murres Along Northern Coast
    International Bird Rescue Reporting Starving Murres Along Northern Coast
    August 16, 2018 | By Bay City News
    Officials with International Bird Rescue said staff members are treating more hungry and exhausted young Common Murres at the rescue’s Fairfield wildlife hospital this summer. More than 100 murres have been admitted to intensive care at the San Francisco Bay-Delta Wildlife Center in Fairfield. The birds are starving and many chicks have contaminated feathers from […]
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  • Swiss Brothers Get Ready to Refloat the Bubble Car
    Swiss Brothers Get Ready to Refloat the Bubble Car
    August 16, 2018 | By Reuters
    ZURICH—With its quirky egg shape and minimalist interior, the bubble car was a symbol of cheap and cheerful mobility on European roads in the 1950s and 60s. Today, two Swiss brothers are developing a new version of the two-seater, a full 56 years after BMW halted production of its famed Isetta after churning out more […]
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  • Pleasanton Water Recycling Plant Expansion
    Pleasanton Water Recycling Plant Expansion
    August 15, 2018 | By Ilene Eng
    The Dublin San Ramon Services District (DSRSD) and East Bay Municipal Utility District (EBMUD) celebrated the finished expansion project at Jeffrey G. Hansen Water Recycling Plant in Pleasanton on August 15. The plant’s expansion will provide more recycled water in the Tri-Valley. The recycling plant is currently in operation. The recycling plant has been operating […]
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  • Thousands Gather in Israeli Desert for Meteor Shower
    Thousands Gather in Israeli Desert for Meteor Shower
    August 13, 2018 | By Reuters
    MITZPE RAMON, Israel—Thousands of star-gazers gathered overnight at one of the darkest spots in Israel hoping to be dazzled by the annual Perseid meteor shower, only to be left somewhat disappointed by the show. Locals had the rare task of directing traffic on a moonless Monday night in Mitzpe Ramon in the heart of the […]
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  • Hurricane Season Started Early but May Not Create as Many Storms
    Hurricane Season Started Early but May Not Create as Many Storms
    August 3, 2018 | By Bloomberg
    The Atlantic hurricane season may have gotten off to an early start this year, but it’ll probably end with a whimper—at least when it comes to the total number of storms. Twelve named storms are likely to form in 2018, fewer than last year’s 17 and below the 1981-2010 average, according to a forecast Aug. […]
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  • UK Government Report Shows Fracking Increases Air Pollution
    UK Government Report Shows Fracking Increases Air Pollution
    August 3, 2018 | By John Smithies
    LONDON—A British government report about fracking, which concluded that the method of shale oil or gas extraction increases air pollution, was left unpublished for three years and was only made public just four days after the firm Cuadrilla was given the go-ahead to start the practice in Lancashire. The report was written by the Air […]
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  • Fuel-Economy Proposal Will Cut Traffic Deaths, Lower Car Prices, EPA Says
    Fuel-Economy Proposal Will Cut Traffic Deaths, Lower Car Prices, EPA Says
    August 2, 2018 | By Ivan Pentchoukov
    The Environmental Protection Agency proposed a set of new fuel economy and emissions standards on Aug. 2, estimated to result in 12,700 fewer traffic deaths, make passenger cars more affordable, and give automakers more freedom to create cars based on consumer preference rather than government mandate. Car manufacturers currently are  mandated to incrementally reach an […]
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  • Mother Orca Refuses to Abandon Her Dead Baby
    Mother Orca Refuses to Abandon Her Dead Baby
    August 1, 2018 | By Chris Jasurek
    In a tremendous display of grief and maternal instinct, a mother killer whale continues to keep afloat the body of her deceased calf in the waters off the Pacific Northwest. The orca, named J35, or Tahlequah, has been carrying her dead calf since it was born on July 24. The calf only lived a few […]
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  • Biologists Track 4 Mountain Lions Kittens to Better Understand How They Survive in the Modern World
    Biologists Track 4 Mountain Lions Kittens to Better Understand How They Survive in the Modern World
    June 20, 2018 | By Alan Cheung
    Biologists found a litter of four mountain lion kittens in the mountains of Southern California earlier this month, the National Park Service (NPS) said on Tuesday. In a bid to track their movement, researchers attached ear tags to the four female kittens; P-66, P-67, P-68, and P-69. They also took tissue samples and gave the wildcats a […]
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  • British Government Could Ban Wet Wipes in an Effort to Save Marine Life
    British Government Could Ban Wet Wipes in an Effort to Save Marine Life
    May 8, 2018 | By John Smithies
      The British government says it may ban wet wipes as part of a broader crackdown on plastic trash, in measures designed to protect the environment. If they are outlawed, shoppers will no longer be able to buy them in their current form. Wet wipes are mostly made of polyester and, when flushed down the […]
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  • Billions of Viruses Are Showering the Planet’s Surface in Every Moment
    Billions of Viruses Are Showering the Planet’s Surface in Every Moment
    February 8, 2018 | By Syndication Partner
    You can’t see it but, this very moment, millions of viruses are falling on the ground around you. Some might originate from thousands of miles away, riding air currents and piggy-backing dust particles, a new study found. Scientists first hypothesized decades ago that viruses could travel over great distances when they found genetically similar viruses occurring in very […]
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  • Wildlife Protection or Persecution?
    Wildlife Protection or Persecution?
    January 16, 2018 | By Martha Rosenberg
    The goldfish and koi started surrendering to the surface around Halloween. Bass, crappie, catfish and the distinctive sunfish/bluegill hybrids that inhabited the pond for 140 years followed. Soon the 5.2 acre South Pond in Chicago’s Lincoln Park sported a slick of shiny, golden and still moving fish, kind of like a macabre woman’s drink. It […]
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  • No Yellowstone Super-Eruption Likely in Our Lifetime, Geologist States
    No Yellowstone Super-Eruption Likely in Our Lifetime, Geologist States
    December 14, 2017 | By Chris Jasurek
    Despite the excitement generated by a somewhat sensationalized research paper released in October, the denizens of North America are not about to be buried beneath an ocean of lava, one geologist claims. Hopefully, that helps everyone sleep a little easier. Everyone in the field of volcanology recognizes that there is a gigantic volcano underneath Yellowstone […]
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  • The Environmental Movement’s Ulterior Motives
    The Environmental Movement’s Ulterior Motives
    December 5, 2017 | By Tara MacIsaac
    It’s hard to argue against environmental conservation. That’s why politicians have often used environmental issues to silence opposition, says analyst Rupert Darwall in his new book “Green Tyranny: Exposing the Totalitarian Roots of the Climate Industrial Complex.” By tying their goals to environmental legislation, industry and political groups can cloak their ulterior motives in green, […]
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  • Adviser Tells Behind-the-Scenes Story of Trump’s Approach to Environment
    Adviser Tells Behind-the-Scenes Story of Trump’s Approach to Environment
    November 23, 2017 | By Tara MacIsaac
    Environmentalist Ed Russo’s hate-turned-to-love relationship with Donald Trump started on a golf course in New Jersey in 2002. Russo was the head of a local committee that had made it practically impossible for Trump’s water-guzzling, chemical-using, habitat-destroying golf course to take root in Bedminster, New Jersey. It wasn’t a vendetta against Trump in particular, but […]
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  • Young Woman Finds Living Sand Dollar, and It’s Unexpected
    Young Woman Finds Living Sand Dollar, and It’s Unexpected
    November 8, 2017 | By Epoch Newsroom
    A young woman found a living sand dollar and recorded it. The clip went viral again this week. The video, as the uploader notes, shows the “difference between a live and a dead sand dollar.” via GIPHY A sand dollar is a type of burrowing sand urchin belonging to the order Clypeasteroida.   Their related […]
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  • A Diet High in Pesticides May Be Poisoning America
    A Diet High in Pesticides May Be Poisoning America
    October 26, 2017 | By Tara MacIsaac
    Washing fruits and vegetables is not enough to avoid ingesting pesticides. Americans and people all over the world are eating pesticide residue every day, as has been shown by the presence of pesticides in blood and urine samples taken from broad populations. The health effects could include a greater risk of cancer, reproductive problems, and […]
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  • ‘If I saw this, I swear I would leave the country’: Viewers React to Video of Creepy Moth
    ‘If I saw this, I swear I would leave the country’: Viewers React to Video of Creepy Moth
    October 25, 2017 | By Holly Kellum
    Video and a photo of a demon-like moth that has four hairy tentacles coming out of its rear have been making waves on the internet. The media, uploaded to Facebook by user Gandik in Indonesia, shows the moth on a white tile floor flexing its hairy tentacles up and down. “This needs to extinct itself […]
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  • Yellowstone Supervolcano Could Erupt Much More Abruptly: Researchers
    Yellowstone Supervolcano Could Erupt Much More Abruptly: Researchers
    October 21, 2017 | By Petr Svab
    If the Yellowstone supervolcano was to erupt, we may get much shorter notice than experts thought, new research suggests. Last time the volcano erupted, ash covered much of the country and blocked the sun for so long it caused a volcanic winter. It burst into the atmosphere with some 240 cubic miles of rock, dust, […]
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  • Ancient Skeleton Uncovered During Hurricane Ophelia
    Ancient Skeleton Uncovered During Hurricane Ophelia
    October 20, 2017 | By Jack Phillips
    An ancient skeleton was discovered after Hurricane Ophelia hit Ireland. The skeletal remains, believed to be at least 1,000 years old, were found intact at Kilmore Quay, County Wexford, after Ophelia-spawned waves hit a walkway, according to the Irish Daily Mirror. “People out walking discovered the remains on Tuesday afternoon. The area has been sealed off since […]
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  • Dying Chimpanzee Recognizes Professor Friend Before Smiling and Embracing Him
    Dying Chimpanzee Recognizes Professor Friend Before Smiling and Embracing Him
    October 20, 2017 | By Epoch Newsroom
    An elderly, dying chimpanzee was recorded being happy to see a professor, who first met the animal back in 1972. “Mama,” a former chimpanzee matriarch at Royal Burgers Zoo in Holland, was refusing food from zookeepers. Then, she was met by Jan van Hooff, who met her decades ago. The ape was unresponsive and curled […]
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  • Video: 3 Cubs Get Rescued From a Dumpster
    Video: 3 Cubs Get Rescued From a Dumpster
    October 19, 2017 | By Epoch Newsroom
    A black bear and her three cubs got a helping hand from a human. The cubs decided to go dumpster diving for food but were unable to get out. “They know how to open the latch to the dumpster,” Shirley Schenk, a woman helped rescue the bears, told ABC News. “This mother is notorious in […]
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Editor's Picks
  • Spygate: The True Story of Collusion [Infographic]Spygate: The True Story of Collusion [Infographic]News Analysis Although the details remain complex, the structure underlying Spygate—the creation of the false narrative that candidate ...Read more
  • US Should Embed Human Rights in Every Aspect of Foreign Policy: CECC ReportUS Should Embed Human Rights in Every Aspect of Foreign Policy: CECC ReportWASHINGTON—The Congressional-Executive Commission on China (CECC) issues a report every year on human rights and rule of law ...Read more
  • Supreme Court Weighs US Right to Detain Criminal Aliens Long After PrisonSupreme Court Weighs US Right to Detain Criminal Aliens Long After PrisonThe government loses the right under federal immigration law to detain for deportation proceedings a lawful permanent resident ...Read more
  • Trump Administration Resets Policy Toward China in Landmark SpeechTrump Administration Resets Policy Toward China in Landmark SpeechVice President Mike Pence’s unprecedented speech on China-U.S. relations last week is still causing shockwaves due to its ...Read more
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