Climate Culture
All Stories
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This magical salt mine is the only mine we’ve ever actually wanted to visit
How can you see this mine -- complete with chandeliers made of salt -- and not want to go there?
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Broccoli-based sunscreen could help protect you from skin cancer
Important to note here: Don't actually just buy broccoli, smash it all over your skin, and then go out into the midday sun.
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Poor snowshoe hares still think they’re camouflaged even when they’re really not
They turn white whether there's snow on the ground or not -- and climate change means that it's more likely that there's not.
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This portable solar cooker can make you dinner in 20 minutes
Toss this puppy in your car for your next camping trip, and prepare for awesome baked (or fried, or boiled) goodness.
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Spaghetti ice cream might be the grossest thing ever
If you like perplexing your taste buds, have WE got the treat for YOU.
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Chobani recalls Greek yogurt that tastes like wine
Preservative-free food is awesome -- unless it makes you sick.
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Bird’s-eye view: Why crows thrive in the urban jungle
With biodiversity on the wane, crows' prospects are inextricably linked with ours. Find out why in this video.
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Ask Umbra: Is there an easier way to get natural gas?
If methane is produced naturally, by everything from cows to wetlands, why do drillers go to such extreme lengths to get at underground methane reserves?
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Forget teens; you should be worried about drunk moose gangs
If there's one thing that humans and moose can agree on, it's that one of the best parts of fall is seasonal, quite alcoholic cider.
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$1,000 question: Did the population bomb ever explode?
Paul Sabin's new book "The Bet" recounts an archetypal conflict between Paul Ehrlich and Julian Simon. On the line: $1,000 and the future of the planet.