Northern Europe and the British Isles
Kids and senior citizens alike rally to rescue beloved young seabirds that have lost their bearings
With a new photovoltaic panel, researchers harness sunshine to harvest energy and food together, taking advantage of the full light spectrum
Be in the right place at the right time to witness these sublime sights
We’re only beginning to understand Antarctica's Thwaites, the world's most vulnerable glacier
A passion for the infinitesimal leads a photographer to discover the countless creatures that live unseen in the ocean
How experts have determined that bristlecone pines, sequoias and baobabs have stood for thousands of years
From Omicron’s spread to a revelation made using ancient DNA, these were the biggest moments of the past year
America's Waterways: The Past, Present and Future
At the border between land and sea, an extraordinary set of experiments is helping us prepare for an uncertain future
The inexpensive Maka Niu collects video and data at depths more than five times greater than trained scuba divers can go
Alicia Escott and Heidi Quante founded the Bureau of Linguistical Reality to create words to help describe people's feelings about climate change
America's Waterways: The Past, Present and Future
Water woes threaten America’s second largest reservoir—but leave new vistas in their wake
In setting fines for timber poaching, experts are looking at different ways to calculate the worth of trees
Years of drought have exposed Robert Smithson's massive earthwork in the Great Salt Lake
The Ice Age left the plant off our East Coast with less genetic diversity than its relative in the Pacific
Studies show that various harmful bacteria cling to microplastics in seawater
Those living in the doomed paradise face a stark choice: resist, adapt, or give in to the ravenous ocean
In the southeast Indian Ocean, turtle-borne sensors are filling in the gaps researchers need to forecast storms
Famed American biologist Patricia Wright explores an astonishing breadth of biodiversity in the wilderness of Madagascar
Treating wastewater creates struvite—a nutrient-rich crystal that bolsters struggling seagrass beds
Back in the 19th century, coal was the nation's newfangled fuel source—and it faced the same resistance as wind and solar today
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