A climate scientist explains why Earth is 'running a fever' and how climate change impacts health, the economy, and daily life.
Students at Notre Dame High School met to discuss democracy during the Electoral Commission’s ‘Welcome to Your Vote Week’.
New Scientist on MSN
Can species evolve fast enough to survive as the planet heats up?
The story of a wildflower that adapted to a severe drought in California raises hopes that evolution will come to the rescue ...
Go looking for wind farms in Spain, and you might quickly end up in Castilla–La Mancha, a region southeast of Madrid. This is the place where Don Quixote, Miquel de Cervantes’s delusional Man of La ...
Olympians Liu and Gu travel very different paths, and China-US relations hang over their stories Iran says skier deeply disappointed at missing Paralympics because of war Russian anthem rings out at ...
Florida’s 60-day regular session ended Friday — without a state budget and just 234 bills passed out of 1,896 filed. That’s 12%. Although lawmakers will return to Tallahassee in mid-April to hammer ...
Despair in the face of environmental destruction and the added struggles of funding, poor job security and low pay is causing ...
The Malta Food Agency's CEO, Brian Vella, said that "it is impossible for someone to enter agriculture from scratch" in Malta if they don't inherit fields from family.
When Matthew Harris was 12, his 15-year-old brother was shot three times in their hometown of Hempstead, New York. At 17, his best friend was shot and killed. Since then, Harris, now 37, has witnessed ...
Bainbridge Island Review on MSN
Inslee addresses climate change topics with Grow Community
Former four-term Washington state governor Jay Inslee held a Q&A session with members of the Grow Community on Bainbridge Island March 12, discussing the state of climate change response in the state, ...
If you are worried about the impact of climate change on our shared future, you’re not alone. Many of us are familiar with the economic impacts of climate-fueled disasters, including ...
Scientists disagree whether human-made climate change or natural fluctuations are mostly to blame for worse-than-expected heat in recent years ...
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