Scotland’s Billionaires Are Turning Climate Change Into a Trophy Game
A net-zero land rush is sweeping the country, and both locals and wealthy “green lairds” are trying to buy in.
A net-zero land rush is sweeping the country, and both locals and wealthy “green lairds” are trying to buy in.
Americans almost drove Canada geese to extinction; now they are so numerous, they’re a nuisance. What do we do next?
Some context.
Could humans be to blame?
Deborah Birx’s Silent Invasion offers more detail and nuance than any other pandemic book.
Experts are expected to choose a vaccine recipe for the fall, when Omicron may or may not still be the globe’s dominant variant.
Astronomers have captured the Milky Way’s supermassive, mysterious abyss, 27,000 light-years from Earth.
Bill Gates has a strategy to save the world from the next infectious threat. He’s not the first.
The party doesn’t even seem to realize that it’s blowing a once-in-a-decade chance to pass meaningful climate legislation.
Early anecdotes about Paxlovid’s effects on long COVID are intriguing, but no one’s testing them in clinical trials yet.
Domesticating horses changed humanity forever. Where and when did it first happen?
The shared history of apes and humans has long been put to political use.
Compared with what the U.S. saw in January, the current rise in cases so far looks pretty chill. Is it, though?
To understand how climate change is altering our planet, it helps to know a little Earth science.
With time and effort, we can build enough protection to blunt surges—but herd immunity remains out of reach.
India’s giant heat wave is having ripple effects for the world’s food supply.
Chimps sleep nine hours a night. Cotton-top tamarins sleep about 13. What happened to humans?
Microphones have captured the whirring and pings of a hard-working rover—and the rush of a gentle Martian wind.
Breed doesn’t have that big an effect on a dog’s personality.
By completely rewiring the network of animal viruses, climate change is creating a new age of infectious dangers.