Rare Wangarru Wallaby Colony Grows in Leaps and Bounds After Australian Rains
The endangered yellow-footed rock wallaby, or Wangarru, a symbol of the Barkindji people, is finally recovering after years of decline
The endangered yellow-footed rock wallaby, or Wangarru, a symbol of the Barkindji people, is finally recovering after years of decline
43 years after Big Ears Observatory's Jerry Ehamn recorded his famous Wow! signal, a citizen scientist has found the signal's origin star.
The new OSU College for Osteopathic Medicine in the Cherokee Nation will be the first tribally-affliated medical school in the country.
A new chemical additive already being used by major brands like Puma, makes plastic biodegrade into harmless elements, not microplastics.
A 5,700-panel solar farm opens for the Indigenous Fort Chipewyan community by Three Nations Energy, the most remote solar farm in the world.
For the first time in a century, the ultra-rare species gass-poly grew from the mud of a Norfolk pond, giving hope to conservationists.
A study published in PNAS demonstrates that N95-like face masks can be made by spinning plastic in a cotton candy machine.
The Trump Administration has denied the Pebble Mine permit in Alaska, a great environmental victory in a decades-long battle to save salmon.
Mindfulness routines like tea and walking in nature are a good way to moderate stress, but wintertime holidays can make routines hard.
Scientists in Canada create a low-cost alternative to palm oil that uses a simple enzyme to turn liquid vegetable oils into solids.
The company Thermal Recycling in England developed an envrionmentally responsible way of disposing of asbestos, a world first.
Agtech startup Plenty will supply produce to 430 grocery stores with their vertical 2-acre farm that produces 350x more than 'flat' farms.