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When US President Donald Trump’s administration started slashing science funding in January, Nicole Maphis wasn’t especially ...
EXCLUSIVE: Here’s word on the latest natural history series out of North America. Blue Ant Media’s Canada-based companies ...
Drawing down carbon from the air and stashing it in underground rock formations has been framed as an essential way to slow ...
In the fall of 1925, agronomist Trofim Lysenko arrived on the dusty plains of what is now Azerbaijan, hoping to keep cows from starving to death over the winter. The young scientist, who learned to ...
GUATEMALA CITY (AP) — The leaders of Mexico, Guatemala and Belize announced on Friday that they were creating a tri-national nature reserve to protect the Mayan rain forest following a meeting during ...
When President Donald Trump signed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act on July 4, he was in many ways delivering on a campaign promise: gutting the country’s signature climate law, the Inflation Reduction ...
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An associate professor at Northern Arizona University was recently awarded a National Science Foundation grant to start a citizen science project focused on changing environments in Antarctica.
Mark Salvatore, an associate professor in NAU’s Department of Astronomy and Planetary Sciences, won a grant from the National Science Foundation to kick off an Antarctic citizen science project.
A mile into her adaptive hike on Mount Charleston’s Lower Bristlecone Trail, Angel Frechette was jubilant about the “pure freedom,” “absolute bliss” and “adrenaline chase” she’d found in the forest.
After six years of research and a successful trial period, a South African program that hopes to curb rhino poaching by inserting radioactive material into their horns is now in operation. The rest of ...