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Breakthrough in coral restoration, say researchers
Nationals push for new coal generator in NSW is a preposterous idea
Little left in RET kitty, but rooftop solar set for record year
Footage of Earth from the International Space Station
Busting more myths about South Australia’s wind and solar
Three beavers released into the wild
How little brown birds get overlooked in the protection pecking order
Ever heard of the King Island brown thornbill? What about the orange-bellied parrot? Can you guess which is more endangered?
In January 2016, a keen birdwatcher named Dion Hobcroft walked into the Pegarah state forest on Tasmania’s King Island with a recorded birdcall and took the first blurry photographs of the King Island brown thornbill.
The brown thornbill, Acanthiza pusilla archibaldi, is a subspecies of the Tasmanian thornbill, distinguished from its cousins on the big island by a slightly longer beak.
Continue reading...Weatherwatch: climate change means lots of birdsong, even in November
Unlike other birds, robins have always sung throughout the season, but now other species are joining them due to their warming environment
The Victorian humorist and poet Thomas Hood took a dim view of the penultimate month of the year: “No fruits, no flowers, no leaves, no birds! – November!”
If he meant no bird song, then, when he was writing, during the cooler climatic interlude known as the Little Ice Age, he would have been spot-on.
Continue reading...River departed 'before Indus civilisation emergence'
How to solve the problem of space junk
A fresh start for climate change mitigation in New Zealand
Explainer: why we shouldn't be so quick to trust energy modelling
Great Barrier Reef: scientists identify potential life support system
Researchers say ‘source reefs’ could produce larvae and help repair damage by bleaching and starfish
A group of “source” reefs have been identified that could form the basis of a life support system for the Great Barrier Reef, helping repair damage by bleaching, starfish and other disturbances.
Researchers from the University of Queensland, CSIRO, Australian Institute of Marine Science and the University of Sheffield searched the Great Barrier Reef for ideal areas that could potentially produce larvae and support the recovery of other damaged reefs.
Continue reading...RemoveDebris: Space junk mission prepares for launch
Teenage brains 'not wired for high stakes'
Satellite eye on Earth: October – in pictures
Atmospheric rivers, salt lakes and autumn leaf colour are among the images captured by Nasa and the ESA last month
Peak autumn leaf colour in north-central Maine, New England, US. The familiar reds and golds typically appear earliest on deciduous trees and shrubs at higher latitudes and elevations, such as here in the mountains of Baxter state park, and take a few weeks before they reach foliage at the coast.
Continue reading...Russia loses contact with new weather satellite
British tourists film moment crocodile lunges at them - video
A crocodile attack in Australia that left a British tourist with a leg wound was captured on camera. In the footage, posted to Facebook by Ally Bullifent, a crocodile can be seen jumping out of the water towards the woman. The attack took place on Monday as the woman walked along the edge of a creek in Cape Tribulation, in the far north of Queensland.
Continue reading...British tourists film moment crocodile lunged out of Australian creek at them
Woman treated in hospital after saltwater crocodile leaps from water in Far North Queensland and injures her
A crocodile attack that left a British tourist with a leg wound has been captured on camera in Australia. In the footage, posted to Facebook by Ally Bullifent, a crocodile can be seen jumping out of the water towards the women as they scream.
The attack took place on Monday as the woman walked along the edge of a creek in Cape Tribulation, far north Queensland.
Continue reading...Stella McCartney calls for overhaul of 'incredibly wasteful' fashion industry
UK fashion designer backs Ellen MacArthur foundation campaign to stop the global fashion industry consuming a quarter of the world’s annual carbon budget by 2050
Clothes must be designed differently, worn for longer and recycled as much as possible to stop the global fashion industry consuming a quarter of the world’s annual carbon budget by 2050.
Fashion designer Stella McCartney condemned her industry as “incredibly wasteful and harmful to the environment” as she joined forces with round-the-world sailor and environmental campaigner Dame Ellen MacArthur to call for a systemic change to the way clothing is produced and used.
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