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Alan Bean, moon-walking astronaut and artist, dies aged 86
‘Going to get worse’: red fire ants detected in Queensland's Scenic Rim
Pests could cost the state in billions if the spread continues, Invasive Species Council warns
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One of the world’s worst invasive pests, red fire ants, have been detected outside a containment zone in Queensland’s Scenic Rim.
The ants, destroyers of crops and harbingers of doom for many common forms of outdoor recreation, are considered a potential $45b problem should they ever become widely established in Queensland.
Continue reading...Venturing to a breakaway iceberg
Tree-sitters put their lives in the balance to foil Appalachian pipeline
In the hills on the border of Virginia and West Virginia protesters – mainly women – are defying police and energy companies in non-violent environmental activism
Way out in the Appalachian hills, on the line between Virginia and West Virginia, after an hour-long backwoods hike up Peters Mountain, an orderly clutch of tents were surrounded by a plastic yellow ribbon that read, “police line do not cross”.
Past that, a woman sat on top of a 50ft pole.
Continue reading...Country diary: mystery of the walled 'rooms' deep in the wood
Mike’s Wood, River Kent, Cumbria: There are dozens of black gates along the valley, marking the route of the Thirlmere to Manchester aqueduct
Like little beacons among the hazel trees, stitchwort flowers lead me onwards towards the enclosure. There is always a moment, before passing through the black gate into this woodland “room”, of wondering about the motives for creating a separate space within the wood. The deeply mossed encircling wall strides over the crags and boulders of precipitous ground – a fine exemplar of the drystone-waller’s art. But why an enclosure here?
Continue reading...A heart full of wing beats
New Zealand's hoki fishery under scrutiny after claims of fish dumping, misreporting
Senior EPA officials collaborated with climate change denial group, emails show
Newly released emails show senior officials from the Environmental Protection Agency worked closely with conservative thinktank the Heartland Institute
Newly released emails show senior Environmental Protection Agency officials working closely with a conservative group that dismisses climate change to rally like-minded people for public hearings on science and global warming, counter negative news coverage and tout Scott Pruitt’s stewardship of the agency.
John Konkus, EPA’s deputy associate administrator for public affairs, repeatedly reached out to senior staffers at the Heartland Institute, according to the emails.
Continue reading...Virgin boss Sir Richard Branson readies himself for space
Virgin boss Sir Richard Branson readies himself for space
'Wolf-like' creature shot near Montana ranch puzzles experts
CP Daily: Friday May 25, 2018
Canada aims for early indicator on post-2022 carbon price trajectory
Waste and Climate Change Intern, Center for Clean Air Policy – Washington DC
'Wolf-like' creature shot on Montana ranch puzzles experts
LCFS Roundup: California prices top $160 as ICE launches trade
ICIS loses second senior carbon analyst
Dinosaur dandruff reveals first evidence of skin shedding
Dinosaur dandruff reveals first evidence of skin shedding
The quick way to make a feather hat in Tynemouth | Brief letters
It is not only the Church of England that is forbidden in law to conduct same-sex marriages (Letters, 25 May). The same legislation applies to the Church in Wales, disestablished in 1920.
Rev Dr Peter Phillips
Swansea
• The Church of England should have read the work of Fredric Brown before teaming up with Amazon (Want to know who God is? Now you can ask Alexa, 25 May). In his short story Answer, a scientist asks the first intergalactic supercomputer the first question: is there a God? “Yes,” it replies, “now there is a God.”
John Cranston
Norwich