Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Earth.
According to a study, thawing permafrost releases significantly more greenhouse gases than anticipated.
Arctic permafrost has long functioned as a massive frozen lid, trapping carbon-rich soils and slowing the escape of gases that could cause global warming. However, the ground may become far more "leaky" after that cap begins to thaw, making it much simpler for climate-forcing chemicals to pass through the soil and into the atmosphere, according to recent lab tests from the University of Leeds.
By Francis Dami4 days ago in Earth
The Gendered Expectations of “Graceful” vs. “Aggressive” Play. AI-Generated.
In the world of sports, the language used to describe athletes is rarely neutral. Words such as “graceful,” “elegant,” “explosive,” and “aggressive” carry implicit value judgments that shape how performances are perceived. These descriptors are not applied evenly; rather, they are deeply entangled with gendered expectations that influence commentary, coaching, media narratives, and even athlete self-perception.
By Gus Woltmann4 days ago in Earth
The Lake
The Terrifying Natural Phenomenon at Lake Natron THE DEATH TRAP OF TANZANIA 💀 In the remote northern reaches of Tanzania, near the border with Kenya at the base of a volcano called Ol Doinyo Lengai, there exists a lake so alkaline and so saturated with minerals that animals who die in its waters are preserved in a state of calcified perfection that makes them appear to have been turned to stone, their bodies encrusted with sodium carbonate and sodium bicarbonate deposits that harden into a shell so complete and so detailed that the preserved animals look like sculptures rather than corpses, frozen in whatever position they occupied at the moment of death with their feathers and fur and facial expressions captured in mineral rather than flesh, and photographs of these calcified animals which went viral when photographer Nick Brandt published his series "Across the Ravaged Land" in 2013 produced reactions ranging from disbelief to horror because the images looked like something from mythology rather than from nature, creatures literally turned to stone by a body of water that functions as one of Earth's most bizarre and most beautiful natural death traps 🌋
By The Curious Writer4 days ago in Earth
Plastic Grit Media
Plastic grit media is a versatile abrasive media that can be used in a variety of applications. It is a lightweight, angular-shaped media most commonly used in the removal of paint or other coatings without harm to delicate substrates such as aluminum or composites.
By Meylin Nur5 days ago in Earth
The Forest That Breathes 🌲
THE WOOD WIDE WEB 🕸️ Beneath every forest on Earth there exists a network so vast and so complex that scientists who discovered it compared it to the internet, a web of fungal filaments called mycorrhizal networks that connect the root systems of virtually every tree in the forest into a single integrated communication and resource-sharing system through which trees exchange nutrients, water, chemical signals, and even electrical impulses, and this discovery has fundamentally altered our understanding of forests from collections of individual competing organisms to interconnected superorganisms where cooperation rather than competition is the dominant survival strategy 🍄
By The Curious Writer5 days ago in Earth
The Empty Quarter: The terrifying beauty and silence of the Rub' al Khali desert.
The low, rhythmic booming started in my molars before it ever reached my ears—a deep, sepulchral thrum that felt like the earth was trying to clear a throat made of pulverized glass. It wasn't a wind. It wasn't a storm. It was the dunes themselves. They were singing. The sound was a visceral, hollow groan, a vibration so intense it made the water in my canteen ripple in perfect, concentric circles. I stood on the spine of a crescent dune that rose six hundred feet into a sky the color of a fresh bruise. The heat didn't just touch the skin; it occupied it. It was a thick, airless weight that tasted of salt and ancient, sun-bleached silence. Everything was red. A staggering, deranged expanse of oxidized quartz that stretched until the curvature of the planet simply gave up.
By The Chaos Cabinet6 days ago in Earth
The Whale Who Sings Alone 🐋
52 HERTZ: THE FREQUENCY OF LONELINESS 🎵 Somewhere in the vast dark waters of the Pacific Ocean there is a whale who has been calling out for a companion for over thirty years and has never received a response, a whale whose vocalizations are produced at a frequency of 52 hertz which is dramatically higher than the frequencies used by any known whale species, blue whales communicate at frequencies between 10 and 39 hertz while fin whales use frequencies around 20 hertz, and this frequency mismatch means that while the 52-hertz whale can hear other whales they cannot hear it, or if they can hear it they do not recognize it as a whale call and do not respond, and this animal has been swimming through the ocean for decades producing calls that travel for hundreds of miles through water that carries every other whale's communications perfectly but that turns this whale's voice into something unrecognizable and unreachable 🌊
By The Curious Writer6 days ago in Earth
The Tree That Survived Everything ☀️🌳
THE OLDEST LIVING THING ON EARTH 🌲 High in the White Mountains of eastern California at an elevation of over ten thousand feet where the air is thin and the soil is poor and the wind blows with enough force to strip paint from metal, there stands a tree that was already ancient when the Egyptian pyramids were being built, a Great Basin bristlecone pine named Methuselah that has been alive for approximately 4,855 years making it the oldest known living non-clonal organism on Earth, and this tree has survived everything that the planet and human civilization have thrown at it including ice ages and droughts and lightning strikes and disease and the complete rise and fall of every civilization that has existed during its lifetime, and it continues growing, adding a fraction of an inch to its trunk each year with the patient persistence of something that measures time in millennia rather than in the minutes and hours that define human urgency 🌎
By The Curious Writer6 days ago in Earth
Using Biochar Machines for Organic Waste Recycling on Farms. AI-Generated.
Every day, farms around the world generate tons of organic waste—crop residues, animal manure, rice husks, and fruit peels—that often ends up in landfills or is burned openly. These practices not only waste valuable resources but also release harmful greenhouse gases like methane and carbon dioxide, worsening climate change and polluting air and water. Fortunately, there’s a game-changing solution: biochar machines. These innovative devices transform farm organic waste into biochar, a carbon-rich "black gold" that enriches soil, reduces emissions, and closes the loop on agricultural waste. Let’s explore how biochar machines are reshaping organic waste recycling and paving the way for more sustainable farming.
By Bestonpyrolysis7 days ago in Earth
Electrification of Heat
by Futoshi Tachino What Changed Heating is undergoing a subtle revolution. In 2022, global sales of electric heat pumps jumped by 11% – the second year in a row of double-digit growth amid high fuel prices and new incentives [1]. Europe led the charge with nearly 3 million heat pumps sold in 2022 (an almost 40% increase from the prior year) [1]. For the first time, Americans also bought more heat pumps than gas furnaces: U.S. heat pump purchases topped 4 million units in 2022, narrowly eclipsing the sales of gas-fired furnaces that year [2]. This milestone was reached even before many new U.S. incentives kicked in, marking a quiet shift in how homes are heated across the country [2].
By Futoshi Tachino7 days ago in Earth






