Full Width [alt+shift+f] FOCUS MODE Shortcuts [alt+shift+k]
Sign Up [alt+shift+s] Log In [alt+shift+l]
26
Heaps of discarded clothing from the U.K. have been dumped in protected wetlands in Ghana, an investigation found. Read more on E360 →
2 months ago

Comments

Improve your reading experience

Logged in users get linked directly to articles resulting in a better reading experience. Please login for free, it takes less than 1 minute.

More from Yale E360

Warming Made Hot, Dry Weather That Fueled Iberian Wildfires 40 Times More Likely

So far this year, fires have burned more than 1.5 million acres across northern Portugal and northwest Spain, killing eight people and forcing tens of thousands to evacuate. The bulk of the wildfires coincided with a brutal heat wave in August, the most intense on record in Spain, which helped set the stage for the devastating burns, experts say.  Read more on E360 →

4 hours ago 1 votes
Global Solar Installations Up 64 Percent So Far This Year

Even as the U.S. guts support for renewable power, the world is still pushing ahead on the shift to solar energy, with installations up 64 percent in the first half of this year. Read more on E360 →

yesterday 3 votes
In Indonesia’s Rainforest, A Mega-farm Project Is Plowing Ahead

The Indonesian government is fast-tracking a massive agricultural project that is turning 7 million acres of tropical forest into rice and sugarcane farms. Critics say it is the world’s largest deforestation project and would upend the lives of thousands of Indigenous people. Read more on E360 →

6 days ago 4 votes
In Yellowstone, Restored Bison Replenish Grasslands

Bison have made a remarkable comeback in Yellowstone National Park, going from fewer than two dozen animals at the turn of the last century to roughly 5,000 today. Their return, a study finds, has had a remarkable impact on grasslands in the region. Read more on E360 →

6 days ago 9 votes
How the Next Pandemic Could Emerge from an Aardvark Burrow

Animals of all kinds mix and mingle in underground burrows, offering troubling opportunities for diseases to jump species. Read more on E360 →

a week ago 10 votes

More in science

Proteins: Weird blobs doing important things

Episode two of Hard Drugs explores the world of proteins

22 hours ago 2 votes
Warming Made Hot, Dry Weather That Fueled Iberian Wildfires 40 Times More Likely

So far this year, fires have burned more than 1.5 million acres across northern Portugal and northwest Spain, killing eight people and forcing tens of thousands to evacuate. The bulk of the wildfires coincided with a brutal heat wave in August, the most intense on record in Spain, which helped set the stage for the devastating burns, experts say.  Read more on E360 →

4 hours ago 1 votes
Charting The Brain’s Decision-Making

Researchers have just presented the results of a collaboration among 22 neuroscience labs mapping the activity of the mouse brain down to the individual cell. The goal was to see brain activity during decision-making. Here is a summary of their findings: “Representations of visual stimuli transiently appeared in classical visual areas after stimulus onset and […] The post Charting The Brain’s Decision-Making first appeared on NeuroLogica Blog.

an hour ago 1 votes
What Is the Fourier Transform?

Amid the chaos of revolutionary France, one man’s mathematical obsession gave way to a calculation that now underpins much of mathematics and physics. The calculation, called the Fourier transform, decomposes any function into its parts. The post What Is the Fourier Transform? first appeared on Quanta Magazine

yesterday 2 votes
Global Solar Installations Up 64 Percent So Far This Year

Even as the U.S. guts support for renewable power, the world is still pushing ahead on the shift to solar energy, with installations up 64 percent in the first half of this year. Read more on E360 →

yesterday 3 votes