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'Warrior of high status' was buried at Scottish Viking site
Why a protest camp in Florida is being called the next Standing Rock
At first glance the quiet town of Live Oak seems an unlikely venue for a stand against Big Energy. But in recent weeks it’s become a centre of opposition
A north Florida river that attracted the state’s first tourists a century before Walt Disney’s famous cartoon mouse is emerging at the centre of a fight against a contentious 515-mile natural gas pipeline that many are calling America’s next Standing Rock.
One section of the so-called Sabal Trail pipeline is being laid beneath the crystal waters of the Suwannee river, whose pure mineral springs were once fabled to cure anything from marital strife to gout.
Continue reading...Study: real facts can beat 'alternative facts' if boosted by inoculation | Dana Nuccitelli
In our current “post-truth” climate, inoculation may provide the key to making facts matter again
It’s fitting that as Donald Trump continues to flirt with anti-vaccine conspiracy theories, inoculation may provide the key to effectively debunking this sort of misinformation.
That’s the finding of a new study published in Global Challenges by Sander van der Linden, Anthony Leiserowitz, Seth Rosenthal, and Edward Maibach. The paper tested what’s known as “inoculation theory,” explained in the video below by John Cook, who’s also published research on the subject. The video is a lecture from the Denial101x free online course, which itself is structured based on inoculation theory:
What if we gave universal income to people in biodiversity hotpots?
Writer and professor, Ashley Dawson, argues in his new book that capitalism is behind our current mass extinction crisis. But installing universal guaranteed income in biodiversity hotspots may be one remedy.
Human nature isn’t driving mass extinction – as some have argued – but our acceptance of capitalism is, according to English Professor Ashley Dawson with the City University of New York.
In his recent, slim, eye-opening book, Extinction: A Radical History, Dawson lays out the case that our current global economic system is pushing the Earth ever closer to a mass extinction event – one not seen since a rogue comet ended the reign of the dinosaurs. But he also argues there are potential solutions, including giving a universal guaranteed income to populations living in or near biodiversity hotspots to counter poaching, deforestation, and other harmful activities.
Continue reading...Fire brigade help Yorkshire Wildlife Park give polar bear dental check-up
Barnaby Joyce on the future of the Trans-Pacific Partnership
Rare bat born by C-section in San Diego Zoo
Birdlife thrives amid the dogwalkers
Tyne Green, Hexham: Through binoculars, it feels as if I’m watching a wildlife documentary in this country park, minutes from town
The sun comes out as I near Tyne Green, saturating everything in olive-gold light; the trees on the bank, the arches under Hexham Bridge, the billowing plumes of steam from the chipboard factory. As I slow down, I become aware of Sunday morning sounds. Bells are being rung in the abbey on the hill. A women’s eight slices upriver with a rhythmical dipping of oars. Chattering mallards are grouped hopefully by the waterside steps. A double note from a train, traffic on the dual carriageway, the muffled flow of the weir.
Minutes from town, this linear park is busy with dog walkers, runners and golfers thwacking balls among undulating grassy tumps. On the river alongside, parallel lives are lived on the safety of the water or within its thick fringe of willows. A goosander scratches its cheek with an orange-red foot, before taking off, straight as an arrow to skim the surface. A cormorant holds its head up, watchful as a cobra. A shaggily white-chested heron stands motionless by a the calm of an inlet.
Major retailer ERM chooses penalty price over contracting new wind and solar
New data shows heat wave’s impact on Electricity bills
China completes 200 MW solar facility on top of fish farm
Coalition government is missing the point on energy security
A forensic look at Queensland’s mid-summer electricity price surge
Fossils of huge 'wolf-sized' otter unearthed in China
World Wetlands Day 2 February 2017
California isn’t backing down on ambitious climate goal, despite Trump reversal
Hopes of saving orange-bellied parrots hang on foster baby
GreenSync raises $11.5m from CEFC, Southern Cross Venture Partners
Frydenberg says “clean coal” could help Australia meet Paris targets
Australian project to improve water delivery in urban slums gets $27m funding
Monash University’s Sustainable Development Institute aims to ensure water access for urban poor
An Australian project that aims to revolutionise water delivery and sanitation in urban slums has been awarded $27m in funding.
Prof Rebekah Brown, the director of the Sustainable Development Institute at Melbourne’s Monash University, has been awarded a $14m research grant by the Wellcome Trust’s Our Planet Our Health awards in the UK. A further $13m from the Asian Development Bank would cover infrastructure and construction costs.
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