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From sustainability hacks to the latest on climate change to Mother Nature appreciation, Earth is a place to share anything and everything about the planet we call home.
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Top Stories
Stories in Earth that you’ll love, handpicked by our team.
We Were Never Meant to Live Like This!
When you look at the world today, it's like looking at a madhouse. The world is more connected than ever through the miracle of electronic devices. People, at least in the West, of course, there are exceptions, are living longer, eating better, living in homes, and driving the latest cars. We have iPhones/Android phones, social media, AI, etc.
By Nicholas Bishop11 months ago in Earth
Chestnut Ridge Farm/Scottish Highlanders/Lab's & Littlepop's Popcorn!!
Willow & Buhler The Chestnut Story The view from my back deck Chestnut flowering Chestnut Harvest Well to begin my story, we’ll have to go back to 1999 when I planted a chestnut orchard in the northeast section of my town in Ellington, Connecticut. I had come up with the idea from earlier memories of my father working with some trees in our backyard in the late 60’s. I found out land was available and I was planning on building a house as well. I cleared around 8 acres and planted approximately 800 trees! The planting went well and the trees were looking beautiful. Unfortunately, when the following spring came, because of the combination of too much water in the soil and the variety of chestnut trees I had planted, almost all but a few didn’t make it. I didn’t give up and I cleared some more land that was on higher ground and today almost 25 years later, at the time of this writing, I have approximately 150 trees. Not all are producing because some are still too young. In 2022 I had a record crop and I sold about 1,400 lbs. into the market. Last year, 2023, I didn’t do as well they only produced about half as much as in 2022. That’s farming!
By Bruce Luginbuhl 2 years ago in Earth
Look Up
We don’t look up enough. We take the world around us for granted sometimes, and we don’t see the beauty in what we are surrounded by. In all the hustle and bustle, evening appointments, heading to or from work, taking the dog out, taking the trash to the curb, outside, smoking a cigarette (😵💫) or sitting around a fire.
By Colleen Walters2 years ago in Earth
Water Walkers
Lake Superior is a big lake. Some say it is an inland Sea. My Anishinabe people call it Gitchigama or the Great Sea. Lake Superior is a very large body of water that some people consider to be an inland sea. It is the largest freshwater lake in the world by surface area and the third-largest by volume, holding 10% of the world’s surface fresh water. It has a coastline of nearly 10,000 miles and spans across the border between Canada and the United States1. It is also home to many fish species, islands, and shipwrecks23. The name Lake Superior comes from the French term le lac supérieur, meaning the upper lake, because it is above Lake Huron4. However, the Ojibwe people who live around the lake call it gichi-gami, meaning great sea4. This name reflects the lake’s immense size and power, as well as its cultural and spiritual significance for the Ojibwe people. Quote from Microsoft Bing
By Denise E Lindquist3 years ago in Earth
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Environmental Volunteering in Sri Lanka
Reforestation and tree planting is one of the best ways to give back to nature. When you travel, you contribute to air pollution in a very big way. Emissions from air travel being one of the main contributors of global warming, everyone who travel should find a way to at least compensate for some of the pollution they are responsible for.
By Jayantha Wijesinghaabout 2 hours ago in Earth
How to Determine If Your Biochar is High Quality: A Guide to the Key Indicators. AI-Generated.
Biochar production is surging in popularity, driven by its applications in agriculture, carbon sequestration, and industrial filtration. However, not all biochar is created equal. If you have just pulled a batch from your kiln or received a shipment from a supplier, how can you tell if it is actually high quality?
By Bestonpyrolysisabout 7 hours ago in Earth
The Star That Keeps Dimming for No Known Reason
In 2015, astronomers analyzing data from NASA's Kepler Space Telescope discovered a star designated KIC 8462852, located about 1,470 light-years from Earth in the constellation Cygnus, that was exhibiting brightness fluctuations unlike anything that had been observed in over 150,000 stars surveyed by the Kepler mission, and the pattern of dimming was so unusual and irregular that it could not be explained by any known natural phenomena including planets orbiting the star, stellar pulsations, or dust clouds, leading some scientists to seriously propose that the dimming might be caused by artificial structures built by an advanced alien civilization, specifically something like a Dyson swarm of solar collectors orbiting the star to harvest its energy, though this explanation while exciting was considered a hypothesis of last resort only to be entertained after all natural explanations had been exhaustively ruled out. The star, which became known informally as Tabby's Star after astronomer Tabetha Boyajian who led the research team studying it, showed dimming events where its brightness dropped by up to 22 percent, far more than could be explained by a planet passing in front of it, which typically causes dimming of only a fraction of a percent, and the dimming events were irregular and aperiodic, meaning they did not repeat on any predictable schedule, and different dimming events had different characteristics with some showing gradual dimming over days and others showing more sudden brightness drops.
By The Curious Writerabout 10 hours ago in Earth
The Bloop
NOAA detected an ultra-low frequency sound in 1997 that matched no known animal or geological phenomenon In the summer of 1997, an array of underwater microphones operated by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) detected an extremely powerful ultra-low-frequency sound originating from a remote point in the South Pacific Ocean west of South America, and the sound, which was nicknamed "the Bloop" because of the blooping noise it made when sped up to be audible to human ears, was so loud that it was detected on sensors over 3,000 miles apart, making it the loudest underwater sound of unknown origin ever recorded, and the frequency pattern and characteristics of the Bloop did not match any known geological phenomena like volcanic activity or earthquakes, but intriguingly it did show characteristics similar to sounds produced by living creatures, specifically matching the frequency profile of sounds made by marine animals, though the Bloop was many times louder than the loudest sounds produced by the largest known animal, the blue whale, leading to speculation that it might have been generated by an enormous unknown marine animal far larger than any creature known to science.
By The Curious Writerabout 10 hours ago in Earth
The Great Attractor
Why the Milky Way and thousands of galaxies are being dragged at 1.4 million mph toward something we cannot see In the 1970s, astronomers studying the movement of galaxies through space discovered something that should not exist according to our understanding of how the universe works: our Milky Way galaxy and thousands of neighboring galaxies are being pulled at extraordinary speeds toward a specific region of space located approximately 220 million light-years away in the direction of the constellations Triangulum Australe and Norma, moving at approximately 1.4 million miles per hour toward this location, but when scientists looked at that region of space to identify what massive gravitational source could be pulling such an enormous volume of galaxies, they found nothing visible that could account for the attraction, no super-cluster of galaxies large enough to create the observed gravitational effect, no obvious structure that would explain why thousands of galaxies including our own are streaming toward this point like water circling a cosmic drain. This mysterious phenomenon became known as the Great Attractor, and despite decades of observation and increasingly sophisticated astronomical instruments, we still cannot directly observe whatever is causing this massive gravitational pull, though we have developed theories and collected indirect evidence that suggests the reality is even stranger than the initial mystery implied.
By The Curious Writerabout 10 hours ago in Earth
The Wow! Signal
How a 72-second radio burst from deep space shocked SETI scientists and remains unexplained after 47 years On August 15, 1977, at 11:16 PM Eastern time, the Big Ear radio telescope at Ohio State University detected a radio signal from space so powerful, so precisely tuned, and so apparently artificial that astronomer Jerry Ehman, reviewing the computer printout data the next day, circled the signal's alphanumeric designation and wrote "Wow!" in red pen in the margin, giving the transmission its now-famous name and creating what remains the most compelling potential evidence of extraterrestrial intelligence ever detected despite nearly five decades of attempts to find the signal again or explain it through natural phenomena. The signal lasted exactly seventy-two seconds, the maximum time any object could be observed by the Big Ear telescope as Earth's rotation carried that section of sky through the telescope's field of view, and it was detected at a frequency of 1420 megahertz, the exact frequency that hydrogen atoms emit radiation, and this frequency is significant because hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe and because international agreements prohibit terrestrial radio transmissions at this frequency precisely because scientists believe any intelligent civilization would use this frequency for interstellar communication, making it the logical channel to monitor when searching for alien signals.
By The Curious Writerabout 10 hours ago in Earth
Hormuz on Fire
Hormuz on Fire The narrow waters of the Strait of Hormuz have once again become one of the most dangerous flashpoints on Earth. Located between Iran and the Arabian Peninsula, this strategic passage connects the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman and ultimately to the global ocean. Though small in size, the strait carries enormous global importance. Nearly one-fifth of the world’s oil supply passes through this narrow corridor every day.
By Wings of Time about 11 hours ago in Earth
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