Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Earth.
The Hidden Lives of Microbes: How Invisible Worlds Shape Our Planet
Introduction: A Universe in a Drop of Water Imagine holding a single drop of pond water between your fingertips. To the unaided eye, it is bland—clear, serene, and uninspiring. Yet, through the microscope, it's a metropolis. Tiny microbes dart, spin, and cooperate in a more intricate dance than any city on Earth.
By The Chaos Cabinet5 months ago in Earth
The Living Canvas
M Mehran Earth is more than a planet. It is a living canvas, painted with mountains, rivers, forests, and skies. It breathes in winds, whispers in oceans, and pulses beneath our feet with a rhythm older than humanity itself. Yet, despite its beauty, humans often forget that we are merely guests in this vast masterpiece.
By Muhammad Mehran5 months ago in Earth
GADSL, RoHS, and REACH
If you build, buy, or certify automotive parts, the Global Automotive Declarable Substance List (GADSL) is the foundation of chemical transparency across the supply chain. It tells you which substances must be declared (D) and which are prohibited (P) in vehicle components at the time of sale. GADSL is also the bridge to broader chemical regimes such as RoHS, REACH, ELV, and emerging reporting frameworks. This guide shows you—step by step—how to make GADSL work in real life: how to collect supplier data, how to use IMDS effectively, how to manage engineering changes, how to design safer parts, and how to use compliance as a competitive advantage.
By Mahgol Nikpayam5 months ago in Earth
The Future of Affordable Solar: How PV Panel Kits Make It Possible
For decades, solar energy has been seen as the future of clean power, but for many households and small businesses, it felt out of reach—too complicated, too expensive, and often requiring technical expertise to design a working system. Today, that picture is changing rapidly. Thanks to PV panel kits, also known as solar energy kits, renewable power is no longer a luxury. It is becoming a practical, affordable option for everyday people who want to reduce their dependence on the grid, cut energy costs, and step into a sustainable future.
By Lyra Winslow5 months ago in Earth
The Hidden Hike: Bristlecone Pines Draw Tim Kizirian Beyond Mount Washington in Great Basin National Park
By Daniel Carter — Northern California Outdoors & Lifestyle Writer Some people go to Great Basin National Park for the marquee attractions: the marble chambers of Lehman Caves, the popular Bristlecone Trail beneath Wheeler Peak, or the stargazing programs under the darkest skies in the West. But not Tim Kizirian.
By Bay Area Back Roads5 months ago in Earth
Rwanda’s Journey of Restoration: Healing Land, Healing Lives
By Marc Reflects, September 2025 I often pause to look at Rwanda’s rolling hills, and I am struck by how the land tells its own story. Once stripped bare by deforestation, over-farming, and survival pressures, these hills now bear signs of healing. And yet, this healing has not been simple; it has required courage, sacrifice, and sometimes painful trade-offs. Our journey of restoration is not just about saving trees or wetlands only but it is about reshaping lives, livelihoods, and futures.
By Marc Reflects 5 months ago in Earth
The First Time I Went Hiking and Found Peace in Nature
I still remember the day I decided to go on my very first hike. It wasn’t some grand plan to conquer a mountain or tick off a bucket list. Honestly, it was just a quiet Saturday, and I had nothing else to do. A friend had mentioned a local trail not too far from town, and something in me decided that maybe I should try it. At that point, I had no idea how much a simple walk in the woods would change me.
By Ian Munene5 months ago in Earth
Amazing Animals Madagascar
The island of Madagascar has one of the most unique ecosystems on Earth. It is located off the east coast of Africa and is the fourth-largest island in the world. The island is home to rainforests, dry forests, deserts, and coastal reefs.
By Rasma Raisters5 months ago in Earth
Living By the Lakeside
Two species of alligators live in lakes. The American alligators that are native to the Southeastern US and the Chinese alligators living in China. American alligators are mostly found in swamps and marshes. These animals prey upon bullfrogs, crabs, turtles, and large fish. Chinese alligators live in fresh water at the base of mountains and hide in tall grasses and shrubs. They feed on river snails but can also eat insects, aquatic birds, and clams.
By Rasma Raisters5 months ago in Earth











