Of undersea labs, and of old and moldering bones
The Monday science lineup in the Boston Globe is anchored by freelancer Felicia Mello‘s piece on the deep sea and its study. She makes it local, highlighting an East Coast Observatory to … Read More
The Monday science lineup in the Boston Globe is anchored by freelancer Felicia Mello‘s piece on the deep sea and its study. She makes it local, highlighting an East Coast Observatory to … Read More
There’s another round this week to a catastrophism story that seemed once to have all the ingredients for a single, big media splash. It should then have, perhaps, elicited follow-ups … Read More
Several outlets in the last week or so have written up a passel of data, including images, sent from Jupiter by the New Horizons spacecraft. It visited the jovian system … Read More
It’s become one of the accepted items on the tote board of reasons not to warm the Earth up: diseases are moving poleward as temperature rises. In the Globe today, … Read More
It is astonishing how soon and unexpectedly flowersappear, when the fields are scarcely tinged with green.Yesterday, for instance, you observed only the radicalleaves of some plants; to-day you pluck a … Read More
Several recent spurts of news on the disappearing bats of the eastern US have managed to get past The Tracker. However today I happened to note a roundup in the Boston … Read More
The Tracker is so accustomed to boasting about the golden state’s leadership on electrical and many other energy efficiency metrics that it was bracing to see a competition brewing. Several … Read More
Enough of coverage of global warming and all the rantings and ravings it inspires. The Boston Globe‘s Carolyn Y. Johnson today takes readers for a visit with the corps of weather forecasters, some … Read More