My heart leaps up when I behold A rainbow in the sky: [More]
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Feed SubscriptionGlobal Energy Hunger Leaves Little Room to Displace Dirty Fuels
Fifteen terawatts. That's 150 billion 100-watt light bulbs burning 24/7 for a year
Read More »A Fun DIY Science Goodie: Proof Yourself Against Sensationalized Stats
For my book Brain Trust , I interviewed Keith Devlin, NPR s Math Guy, a World Economic Forum fellow, and math professor at Stanford.
Read More »Boost Intelligence by Focusing on Growth
Is intelligence innate, or can you boost it with effort? The way you answer that question may determine how well you learn. Those who think smarts are malleable are more likely to bounce back from their mistakes and make fewer errors in the future, according to a study published last October in Psychological Science .
Read More »Mind Wandering Is Linked To Your Working Memory
Think you can stay focused on this podcast for the next 60 seconds? [More]
Read More »Drilling for Oil in Eden: Initiative to Save Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador is Uncertain
Pumping gasoline in Quito, Ecuador. Oil drilling threatens the Yasun rainforest
Read More »High Status Breeds Feelings of Trust
High status confers a rosy worldview, according to research available online last August in Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes . Psychologists asked college students to write essays about having more prestige than others or being low on the totem pole, thus priming them to think of themselves as having either high or low status
Read More »Effective World Government Will Be Needed to Stave Off Climate Catastrophe
Receding Himalayan glaciers Almost six years ago, I was the editor of a single-topic issue on energy for Scientific American that included an article by Princeton University’s Robert Socolow that set out a well-reasoned plan for how to keep atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations below a planet-livable threshold of 560 ppm. The issue came replete with technical solutions that ranged from a hydrogen economy to space-based solar. [More]
Read More »‘Horizontal Tornado’ Captured By Amateur Videographer
New images of a weird weather phenomenon known as a roll cloud have surfaced from Richland, Miss. [More]
Read More »France Restores Ban on Genetically Modified Maize Crops
By Sybille de La Hamaide PARIS (Reuters) - France set a temporary new ban on the cultivation of Monsanto's MON810 genetically modified maize on Friday, after a previous moratorium was annulled by the country's top court in November.
Read More »Europe’s Chief Scientist Warns against Climate Delays
By Charlie Dunmore BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Union cannot use the economic slowdown as an excuse to delay action on fighting climate change, the bloc's first-ever chief scientific adviser has warned. Molecular biologist Anne Glover took on the newly created role reporting to European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso at the start of this year, having previously served as chief scientific adviser to Scotland's devolved government.
Read More »The Promise and Perils of Pinterest
Even making this image for this blog post violates Pinterest's rules. The Promise – a bold credited, copyright future [More]
Read More »Can Radical Efficiency Revive U.S. Manufacturing?
Editor's note: The following is adapted from the Rocky Mountain Institute's Reinventing Fire: Bold Business Solutions for the New Energy Era . [More]
Read More »Just 55 Alive: World’s Rarest Dolphin Faces Extinction
The population of the world’s smallest and rarest dolphins has dropped by half in the past seven years to an estimated 55 individuals , according to research released March 13 by the New Zealand Department of Conservation (DOC), the University of Auckland and Oregon State University.
Read More »Raising Darwin’s Consciousness: Sarah Blaffer Hrdy on the Evolutionary Lessons of Motherhood
Click here for Part One: An Interview with Sarah Blaffer Hrdy on Mother Nature
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