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Salon.com October 28, 2002 Katharine Mieszkowski |
Data-mining life on earth Every blade of grass, every fish and fowl, slug and snail, has a place on the Web.  |
Wired May 2006 Davis et al. |
Trackback Google not strong enough to enforce freedom world-wide... Blogosphere to remain the largest galaxy in the social media universe... Fastest feet in the West... Predicting the Big One... Welcome to the videodrome... Mark of the beasts... etc.  |
Real Travel Adventures October 2006 Bonnie & Bill Neely |
Costa Rica's Monteverde Cloud Forest Costa Rica is a place to appreciate this beautiful earth and to reflect on how we can incorporate wise practices of preservation into our own habits and laws when we return home.  |
Parameters Spring 2004 Robert J. Pratt |
Invasive Threats to the American Homeland Before 11 September 2001, when American leaders prepared for war they envisioned enemies using bombs, tanks, guns, military force, and other traditional armaments. The attacks on that fateful day forever changed the way the United States and the world would view the nature of war.  |
Scientific American August 2007 Steve Mirsky |
Floral Derangement Some of these vegetables are minerals.  |
Scientific American March 2009 David Appell |
Can "Assisted Migration" Save Species from Global Warming? As the world warms up, some species cannot move to cooler climes in time to survive. Camille Parmesan thinks humans should help even if it means creating invasive species  |
Smithsonian April 2007 Jen Phillips |
Species Explosion What happens when you mix evolution with climate change?  |
Chemistry World December 3, 2010 Harriet Brewerton |
Butterfly effect A way to identify individual butterflies from the same species has been designed by scientists in Hungary, who say that the technique could be used to analyse delicate museum samples without destroying them.  |