A team of researchers from the University of Georgia and San Diego State University has found that the practice of feeding wildlife could be more detrimental to animals than previously thought.
articles
A Possible End to ‘Forever’ Chemicals
Excess electrons could help break the strong chemical bonds in products that contaminate water supplies.
What We Don't Know (About Lakes) Could Hurt Us
As extreme weather increases, scientists from 20 countries warn of risk to lakes and water quality.
Ancient Shell Shows Days Were Half-Hour Shorter 70 Million Years Ago
Beer stein-shaped distant relative of modern clams captured snapshots of hot days in the late cretaceous.
Enhanced Tandem Solar Cells Set New Standard in Converting Light Into Electricity
Though they may look smooth, standard silicon wafers used for solar cells feature tiny pyramidal structures about two micrometres high.
Acacia Bushlands Prevent Climate Warming in Eastern Africa
Changes to the vegetation cover of land surfaces constitutes the biggest cause of increasing carbon dioxide emissions after the use of fossil fuels.