Prologue One of the reasons I moved to Claremont, California, in 2008 was Claremont’s banning of the gasoline-powered leaf ...
Australians are being fooled into driving bigger and more dangerous vehicles, and they are killing us in more than one way.
Some of the world's smallest animals and their tiny poops could aid in the fight against climate change. A study reports that clay dust sprayed on the surface of seawater converts free-floating carbon ...
Greenhouse gas emissions are climbing globally, leading to the highest temperatures recorded around the world in modern ...
Leveraging the food of tiny phytoplankton could trap carbon and sequester it to the ocean’s bottom.
Given the entry-level price tag, I wasn't expecting a fully stacked smart feature set. However, I was pleasantly proven wrong ...
Prenatal exposure to ozone pollution could be harming the cognitive development of unborn children, according to new ...
In the face of climate change, the transition to a net-zero economy involving renewable energy sources and energy storage solutions is an urgent endeavour where electrochemical energy conversion and ...
A Dartmouth-led study proposes a new method for recruiting trillions of microscopic sea creatures called zooplankton in the ...
Michael Bevington explains the health risks associated with exposure to radiofrequency radiation and electromagnetic fields ...
In lab experiments, the researchers found clay dust captured as much as 50% of organic carbon particulates before they could oxidize into carbon dioxide. This video show that the sticky heavy flocs of ...
A study led by Dartmouth researchers shows that microscopic marine animals called zooplankton (pictured) can be enticed to ingest organic carbon particulates in seawater that are later confined to the ...