Author: David A Gabel, ENN

  • EPA Report Identifies Toxic Contamination in Communities Across the Country

    Yesterday, the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released its annual report of the Toxics Release Inventory (TRI). The TRI consists of information on toxic chemical disposals and toxic air emissions, as well as waste management and pollution prevention activities. The EPA report covers neighborhoods all across the United States for the year 2010. Many of…

  • Wildlife Protection at Glover’s Reef, Belize Falling Short

    Belize, the small Central American nation facing the Caribbean Sea on the Yucatan Peninsula, is home to extremely diverse and tropical wildlife. A large stretch of sea surrounding Glover’s Reef, an atoll reef lagoon that is home to a beautiful resort, has been placed under government protection. As a result of the fishing ban, populations…

  • Joint USA-Canada Arctic Ocean Survey Comes to an End

    Yesterday marked the completion of a five year collaboration between the United States and Canada to survey the Arctic Ocean. As the changing Arctic climate causes the ice to melt, this region will become more accessible to resource recovery. The project’s goal was to delineate the continental shelf beyond 200 nautical miles from the coastline.…

  • First Humans in Europe Identified

    Researchers at the Oxford University have determined that a recovered jawbone and teeth originate from the first modern humans in Europe. The fossilized remains have been carbon dated to reveal the age of the bones. The researchers first believe the fossils, which were found in a prehistoric cave in Italy, were those of the Neanderthal.…

  • New Benefit of Aspirin: Preventing Cancer

    Aspirin, also known as acetylsalicylic acid, is one of the most widely used drugs in the world. It is proven to lower fevers, relieve minor aches and pains, and to reduce inflammation. It also has the long-term use of preventing heart attacks, strokes, and blood clots due to its antiplatelet characteristic, which prevents blood from…

  • Future Migrations in an Environmentally Uncertain World

    There are several major forces at play in today’s world. Two forces involved with the migrations of people include globalization and mass exodus from the countryside to cities. Another major force, climate change, is playing an ever greater role, affecting societies with extreme droughts, floods, and other dangers. How will future migrations be affected by…

  • Virgin Atlantic Airways to Use Industrial Waste as Jet Fuel

    Always on the cutting edge, Sir Richard Branson, president of Virgin Atlantic, has set his company on a course towards further sustainability. Virgin Atlantic Airways has announced plans to fly commercial routes on a waste-based, synthetic gas fuel rather than typical jet fuel. The reconstituted fuel will produce half the carbon emissions. The technology making…

  • Study: China to Surpass US Per Capita Emissions by 2017

    The biggest polluters in the world are known to be the United States of America and China. In 2007, China overtook the United States for the dubious role of world’s greatest carbon emitter. However, because the United States is so much wealthier per capita than the People’s Republic, individual US citizens could claim that they…

  • Tallest Building in New York Now LEED Certified

    The tallest building in New York currently standing is the Empire State Building. It is a beautiful symbol of the greatness of New York, rising 1,250 feet (381 meters) with an antenna spire rising to 1,454 feet (443.2 meters) above bustling midtown Manhattan. It was named one of the Seven Modern Wonders of the Modern…

  • Team of International Marine Scientists Call for Ban on Deep Sea Fishing

    Fishing restrictions near the coast lines have been in place for many years, of which many local fishermen are well aware. These restrictions are understood to be vital in maintaining a stable population of wild fish for harvesting. In recent years, due to these restrictions, many industrial fishing vessels have ventured deeper into the open…