The case to give up fossil fuels, reducing police brutality, COVID rebound, and more!

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February 08, 2023

Climate Change

We Can't Solve Our Climate Problems without Removing Their Main Cause: Fossil-Fuel Emissions

"Realists" argue that climate plans need to accommodate oil and gas, but that only perpetuates the climate crisis

By Naomi Oreskes

Psychology

This Change Could Reduce Police Brutality against Black Drivers like Tyre Nichols

Cops—no matter their own race—are more confrontational toward Black drivers. Social psychologist Nicholas Camp describes ways to reduce police antagonism

By Marla Broadfoot

Epidemiology

COVID Rebound Can Happen Even without Paxlovid

Concerns about Paxlovid rebound are preventing some doctors from prescribing the lifesaving drug and some high-risk patients from taking it

By Lauren Gravitz

Climate Change

Solving Cement's Massive Carbon Problem

New techniques and novel ingredients can greatly reduce the immense carbon emissions from cement and concrete production

By Mark Fischetti,Nick Bockelman,Wil V. Srubar

Animals

How Scientists Are Using AI to Talk to Animals

Portable sensors and artificial intelligence are helping researchers decode animal communication—and begin to talk back to nonhumans

By Sophie Bushwick

Climate Change

Rainmaking Experiments Boom Amid Worsening Drought

Scientists and companies are scrambling to find new ways to squeeze more rain from the skies as climate change intensifies drought

By Chelsea Harvey,Corbin Hiar,E&E News

Policy

Black Inventor Garrett Morgan Saved Countless Lives with Gas Mask and Improved Traffic Lights

In 1916 he strapped on his "safety hood" and dragged rescuers to safety, but racism prevented him from being hailed as a hero 

By Leo DeLuca

Materials Science

Scientists Made A New Kind Of Ice That Might Exist On Distant Moons

The 'amorphous' solid is denser and could be water 'frozen in time'

By Jonathan O'Callaghan,Nature magazine

History

Scientists Decipher 57 Letters That Mary, Queen of Scots Wrote before Her Beheading

In newly deciphered letters written from captivity in the late 1800s, deposed queen of Scotland Mary Stuart complained about her health and tried to negotiate her release

By Stephanie Pappas

Climate Change

15 Million People Are at Risk from Bursting Glacial Lakes

At least 15 million people worldwide live in the flood paths of lakes that form as mountain glaciers melt and that can abruptly burst their banks
By Chelsea Harvey,E&E News
FROM THE STORE
FROM THE ARCHIVE

Fossil-Fuel Subsidies Must End

Despite claims to the contrary, eliminating them would have a significant effect in addressing the climate crisis

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"Is it realistic to think you can solve a problem while continuing to do the very thing that caused it?"

Naomi Oreskes, professor of the history of science at Harvard University.

WHAT WE'RE READING

The Physics of James Joyce's Ulysses

The 101-year-old novel shows that "physics and literature are not mutually exclusive."

By Jennifer Ouellette | Ars Technica | Feb. 4, 2023

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