By Alex Tung
In a recent blog post at the National Geographic’s Nat Geo News Watch, Sandra Postel, a Worldwatch Institute Senior Fellow and one of the authors of the upcoming State of the World 2011:...
By Danielle Nierenberg on August 20, 2010 in Africa, Asia, Australia, Belize, Brazil, Central America, Fiji, Indonesia, Mexico, Nigeria, North America, Pacific, Philippines, Photos, South America, Southeast Asia, West Africa
By Daniel Kandy
The World Mangrove Atlas revealed some good news and some bad news. The good news is that the loss of mangroves has slowed to 0.7 percent annually. The bad news is that that...
As most of you know, I’m currently traveling/housesitting in Europe. This has sent my photography into overload…so instead of one photo this week – you get a set of photos from my recent trip to...
Elfreth’s Alley, our nation’s oldest residential street, dates back to the first days of the eighteenth century.
What makes the street special is not just that it preserves 32 examples of Georgian and Federal architecture, but...
Haegwan Kim: Let me start by asking why you became a race car driver.
Leilani Munter: I got my degree in biology from the University of California in San Diego, and I got into a race car,...
Bikes parked everywhereAs soon as I stepped out of Amsterdam Centraal station from the airport, I saw what makes Amsterdam different from other cities I’ve visited…no, not the canals (Venice has canals!); it was the...
Something is wrong. It should be illegal to offer unlimited flights. It's a crime against climate.
Jet Blue has brought back their "All you can Jet" deal. For only $699, or $499 (if you don't want...
This week marks the 30-year anniversary of the disappearance of a baby named Azaria Chamberlain, snatched as she slept in a tent on a family camping trip in Australia's outback by a wild dog known...
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