How kitty litter could combat climate change
One of the key ingredients in commercial cat litter can help capture methane out of the air and convert it into carbon dioxide, which could help provide a variety of new climate solutions.
Some critics warn that new inlets in the Lagoon could risk changing the ecology of the lagoon while pushing pollution south, eventually onto beaches.
Owner Billy Milliken told Insider that Ducks Ledges Island has dangerous conditions in the winter and no running water. It's not for everyone.
Our long-term 2022 Kia EV6 doesn't have a charge cable, so we explore what that practically means.
Giant African land snails, an invasive species of mollusk, poses a threat to Florida residents as it can spread meningitis from a parasite it carries.
California cities have a slew of restrictions to save water amid the extreme drought. Here's what is happening in Ventura County.
The woman shakily recorded the interaction at a Tennessee cabin and shared it on TikTok.
In Phoenix, temperatures are rising at an alarming rate due to climate change — but Mayor Kate Gallego has a plan to cool things down. As the summer months bring deadly temperatures, the newly created Office of Heat Response and Mitigation — the first of its kind in the U.S. — has been charged with easing the burden for Phoenix’s most at-risk residents and developing plans to ensure America’s hottest city remains livable.
Of the two tropical storms and one disturbance in the Atlantic region Saturday morning, the National Hurricane Center forecasts one to become a hurricane, one to dissipate by Monday and one to become nothing more than it is right now.
Hold on to your wallet. Due to inflation and prices surging for natural gas, heating oil and other fuels, you will see a significant rise in your utility bills. So if you've opened your electric bill...
Heavy rains. Less snow. Up to 60 days of extreme heat, every year by the end of the century.
Frank Cerabino's column: How PBSO needs to do a better job selling the public on the menace caused by wandering young bear killed in Royal Palm Beach
Photo Illustration by The Daily Beast / GettySpace missions are set to take off in the coming decades. Not only is NASA planning to return to the moon with the Artemis missions, but the agency and a host of private space companies like SpaceX have their sights set on colonizing Mars. As we enter the dawn of a new space age, however, there’s still little we understand about the impacts of long-term space travel on humans. But some new research sheds light on how months of microgravity affect the
U.S. officials are testing a new wildfire retardant after two decades of buying millions of gallons annually from one supplier, but watchdogs say the expensive strategy is overly fixated on aerial attacks at the expense of hiring more fire-line digging ground crews. The Forest Service used more than 50 million gallons (190 million liters) of retardant for the first time in 2020 as increasingly destructive wildfires plague the West. It exceeded 50 million gallons again last year to fight some of the largest and longest-duration wildfires in history in California and other states.
(Bloomberg) -- The site of Mexico’s newest oil refinery looks more like a tech campus than a place where dirty crude is processed into gasoline and diesel. Most Read from BloombergJPMorgan Sees ‘Stratospheric’ $380 Oil on Worst-Case Russian CutUS Court Ruling May Take 70,000 Truckers Off Road, Spur JamsCrypto Meltdown Claims Rolex and Patek Philippe as VictimsJPMorgan’s Aronov Ignores the ‘Cash Is Trash’ Chorus: Q&AHome Sellers Are Slashing Prices in Sudden Halt to Pandemic BoomFloor-to-ceiling
While gardeners enjoy seeing wildlife and don't mind a little garden damage, there are ways to stop them from treating your plants like a smorgasbord.
Heavy rain is possible along portions of the Texas coast for the next two days and could affect travel.
Combat the rise of plastics with this environmentally-friendly cleaning alternative that will help you clean your home sustainably.
When drastic increases in food costs spurred by the COVID-19 pandemic left Andrew Caplinger struggling to find fresh catfish for his restaurants, he decided to try “an experimental” solution — growing his own. In the coming months, the Indianapolis restaurant chain Caplinger’s Fresh Catch Seafood will begin sourcing its second most popular menu item from fish ponds at his 28-acre farm in southern Indiana. It’s a move that could increase local appetite for fish, Caplinger said.
Grunion run has fascinated scientists and locals for decades, but their future is threatened by the climate crisis
Hikers should be careful of protective animals, officials warned