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It's 30 years since scientists first warned of climate threats to Australia
GlassPoint to build California’s largest solar energy project on oil field
Six things New Zealand's new government needs to do to make climate refugee visas work
Meters urgently needed after Barwon-Darling water theft allegations, report says
Ken Matthews, who is in charge of fixing NSW’s water administration, says he is ‘disappointed’ at lack of progress on prosecutions
Modern water meters need to be rolled out as a matter of urgency in the Barwon-Darling river system and prosecutions launched against breaches, the man charged with fixing New South Wales’s water administration has warned.
Immediately after the ABC Four Corners program that alleged large-scale water theft and meter tampering by some irrigators, the state government asked water expert Ken Matthews to review the system.
Continue reading...Vestas, CWP get serious about plan to export Pilbara solar and wind to Asia
Review of Governance of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority – Government Response
'Unnatural' microbe can make proteins
How climate change is impacting motherhood in the climate science community
Climate change influencing motherhood, Indigenous children & foster care, stroke recovery
Mynas v miners: they might be swooping menaces but they're not all bad
Know your miner from your myna. Both are aggressive in different ways – discover why we’re killing one but never the other
• Vote for Australia’s bird of the year
A kookaburra nestles on my balcony and belts its deliciously rambunctious laugh, like an ape in a zoo. But, mid-cackle, it is interrupted by a series of urgent, high-pitched screams like sirens.
Three miner birds flutter in its face, screaming hysterically at it. At first, the kookaburra just gives the unrelenting interlopers an unblinking, nonchalant death stare before eventually giving in and moving on. The miners follow it and chase it out of the neighbourhood.
Continue reading...Caesar's invasion site 'found': Is this where the Romans landed?
Hidden history of prehistoric women's work revealed
'Buried in marshes': sea-level rise could destroy historic sites on US east coast
New research shows by the end of the century an increase in sea level will threaten the White House, early colonial settlements and other historic places
Large tracts of America’s east coast heritage are at risk from being wiped out by sea level rise, with the rising oceans set to threaten more than 13,000 archaeological and historic sites, according to new research.
Even a modest increase in sea level will imperil much of the south-eastern US’s heritage by the end of the century, researchers found, with 13,000 sites threatened by a 1m increase.
Continue reading...New study uncovers the 'keystone domino' strategy of climate denial | Dana Nuccitelli
How climate denial blogs misinform so many people with such poor scientific arguments.
The body of evidence supporting human-caused global warming is vast – too vast for climate denial blogs to attack it all. Instead they focus on what a new study published in the journal Bioscience calls “keystone dominoes.” These are individual pieces of evidence that capture peoples’ attention, like polar bears. The authors write:
These topics are used as “proxies” for AGW [human-caused global warming] in general; in other words, they represent keystone dominoes that are strategically placed in front of many hundreds of others, each representing a separate line of evidence for AGW. By appearing to knock over the keystone domino, audiences targeted by the communication may assume all other dominoes are toppled in a form of “dismissal by association.”
Continue reading...Apples should be kept in the fridge now – but what about oranges and bananas?
New labelling guidelines suggest we should keep more of our fruit in the fridge. But not everything is suitable for cold storage – here’s a fruit-by-fruit guide
Is there anything more disappointing than biting into an apple, only to find it has gone all fluffy and soft? It happens all the time – and now we know why. According to a government initiative on food labelling, it is because we are not storing our Pink Lady apples in the fridge.
As part of a drive to reduce annual household food waste in the UK by 350,000 tonnes, labelling is changing. In future, it will include, among other things, a “little blue fridge” icon for foods that keep for longer in the fridge, including apples and oranges. Can this be right? Well, yes – but it’s a matter of timing. Here’s a guide to when to let fruit chill.
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