Agroecology Is the Solution to World Hunger

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September 22, 2021

Agriculture

Agroecology Is the Solution to World Hunger

Millions of farmers are growing and sharing food in ways that enhance nutrition, biodiversity and quality of life

By Raj Patel

Astronomy

The Nail-Biting Journey of NASA's James Webb Space Telescope Is About to Begin

Before it can study the first stars and galaxies, the observatory must endure a sea voyage, a rocket launch and an all-or-nothing deployment sequence in deep space

By Nikk Ogasa

Privacy

How Facebook Hinders Misinformation Research

The platform strictly limits and controls data access, which stymies scientists

By Laura Edelson,Damon McCoy

Fossil Fuels

China Says It Will Stop Financing Coal Power Abroad

The announcement came as the U.S. promised quadruple its international climate finance contributions

By Sara Schonhardt,E&E News

Engineering

Winged Microchips Glide like Tree Seeds

The tiny sensors could gather and transmit environmental data as they drift through the air

By Nikk Ogasa

Cosmology

New Type of Dark Energy Could Solve Universe Expansion Mystery

Hints of a previously unknown, primordial form of the substance could explain why the cosmos now seems to be expanding faster than theory predicts

By Davide Castelvecchi,Nature magazine

Evolution

Meet the Bat Woman and Bat Man of India

They sealed their love with dead bats. Now these researchers are on a mission to save India's endangered chiropteran species together.

By Emily V. Driscoll

Planetary Science

NASA Unveils Ice-Hunting VIPER Rover's Lunar Landing Site

The space agency's first-ever robotic moon rover will touch down in late 2023 just west of Nobile, a crater near the lunar south pole

By Mike Wall,SPACE.com

Behavior

Discrimination Persists in Society--but Who Discriminates?

Is discriminatory behavior widely dispersed or highly concentrated in a small number of people?

By David Z. Hambrick

Psychology

Making Eye Contact Signals a New Turn in a Conversation

Neuroscientists have uncovered an intriguing subtlety in how we communicate—that is, when we're not on Zoom

By Lydia Denworth

Paleontology

Kids' Fossilized Handprints May Be Some of the World's Oldest Art

Ice Age impressions in limestone show that human ancestors inhabited the area

By Nicoletta Lanese,LiveScience
FROM THE STORE

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FROM THE ARCHIVE

Pandemic of Hunger

COVID-19 is straining African food security but also presents an opportunity for change

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"Ending hunger requires much more than pulling more food from the ground; it involves grappling with entrenched hierarchies of power."

Raj Patel, professor of public affairs at the University of Texas at Austin and member of the International Panel of Experts on Sustainable Food Systems

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