Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Earth.
Discover How Sea Moss Supplements Can Help You Incredibly in So Many Different Ways!
In its most minor complicated terms, sea moss — also known as Irish sea moss — is a sort of red-green growth accepted to help your well being and improve your skin. Different societies have gone to it for quite a long time to develop well being further. While it needs critical science to back up the advantages, specialists say it has some stand-apart benefits.
By rachael everly4 years ago in Earth
Drone Flies
When we think of 'flies', the image that comes to mind are those annoying blow-flies that somehow manage to get into a slither of space in a window, bash themselves about your house, trying to find a way back outside, yet can't seem to find their way out of two open doors, and several open windows! We think of pesky, dirty things we swat away. Things that carry disease and land on dirty things. Things that bite!
By Deborah Robinson4 years ago in Earth
For and against the 97% consensus on climate change
Climate sceptics are fond of challenging the oft-vaunted claim that 97% of climate scientists agree that current global warming is largely caused by mankind – the word commonly used is “anthropogenic”. So can that 97% figure be justified? Do the sceptics have a point?
By John Welford4 years ago in Earth
Pears Falling
Colours flick past the window of the passenger side of my car. I'm soaking in snippets of nature, travelling back from the road as far as the eye can see. Vibrant yellow canola flowers against an indigo sky. Rolling hills in the distance dotted with cows and little trees. Luscious fruit ripening on vast orchards in the blaring sun. Nature puts on a display every time I take a road trip to fruit country.
By Kate Ashforth4 years ago in Earth
She sleeps very little
When she is not sleeping, she is hiking, a perpetual motion machine. Her baby is approaching two years old but is still not weaned so hikes include the toddler, in tow. Likewise, she has a teenage son who joins these walks as do a couple of neighborhood female friends with their kids. An orphaned foster child that she took under her wing also joins the cadre on these strolls. There is safety in numbers. Hiking is a dangerous business in the 21st century. She is the wisest and most stoic thus despite no official nomination or election, she is the recognized leader of the peripatetic band, usually setting a brisk, but measured pace, permitting the younger of the troupe to keep up.
By Alexander J. Cameron4 years ago in Earth
Sacrifice & Hold Onto Hope
Our natures are not always nice. For many nice means sacrifice. Sweeter we are, more we entice. All things we get come from a source. We follow our nose & the course. Persistent we stamp like a horse. We’re taught to meet all life’s demands. We are to obey life’s commands! In Sol's eyes we’re counted as sands. All of life is an ebb & flow. Some of us stay, some of us go. The source of life the truth does know. Life’s earth, water, fire, & wind, with our language some say we’ve sinned. Is our life free or are we pinned? The choices we make show our taste. Do we savor or eat with haste? Do we love laughs or contemplate?
By David Duran 4 years ago in Earth
Should plastic be banned?
Prohibition of bags alone will not solve the plastic problem, but it can help change the way plastic is used and make buyers and sellers more open to alternatives. Recent policies, such as the direct blockade of Jakarta and the imposition of sanctions on Japan, are important steps for policymakers to move away from a direct economy that consumes and dumps resources. They can reduce the amount of plastic bags that end up dumping garbage, closing sewers, polluting our environment, decomposing into microplastic pollution, and killing wildlife.
By Rosan Pandey4 years ago in Earth







