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Earth, Energy & Environment

Bio-hydrogenation vials

Stale Bread and E. Coli Could Transform How We Make Drugs and Plastics

At the confluence of the Fimi and Kasai rivers in the Democratic Republic of Congo, dark water from forest landscapes meets water from the savannahs, colored red by iron oxides.

Black Lakes Are Leaking Ancient Carbon Into The Sky

locked gates with warning signs

Living Near A Nuclear Plant Raises Cancer Death Risk, US Study Finds

mccloud glacier

Our Best- and Worst-Case Scenarios for a Warming Antarctica

(Left) Conventional AEM water electrolysis uses different catalysts at each electrode, which adds complexity, cost, and long-term performance issues from binders. (Right) The new single-atom “all-in-one” catalyst works at both electrodes, simplifying the design, cutting precious metal use and cost, and staying stable without binders.

The Single Atom That Does Everything

Woman using an air quality app on her cell phone

Dirty Air Tied to Alzheimer’s Incidence

lasma particles flowing inside a doughnut-shaped fusion system

The Lopsided Exhaust That Could Make or Break Fusion Power

salt energy graphic

Cell Membranes Could Unlock the Ocean’s Hidden Power Supply

gravity hole graphic

Earth’s Strongest Gravity Hole Sits Beneath Antarctica—And Now We Know How It Got There

Corona mass ejection sun eruption

Capturing The Sun in a Bottle

solar panel installation

Next-Generation Solar Panels Could Slash Billions of Tonnes of CO₂ From Their Own Manufacturing

Yuhji Yamamoto examines drilling cores on the JOIDES Resolution during the 2012 expedition in the North Atlantic.

Earth’s Magnetic Poles Took Seven Times Longer To Flip Than Anyone Thought

closeup of oranges

Orange Peels Clean Up One of Industry’s Messiest Problems

damaged homes from earthquake

When the Sun Sneezes, Does Earth Crack?

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