Read more about the article Bottling Second Chances: Inmates Craft Fine Wine on a Remote Tuscan Prison Island
<> on September 3, 2014 in Gorgona, Italy.

Bottling Second Chances: Inmates Craft Fine Wine on a Remote Tuscan Prison Island

Off Italy’s western coast in the Tuscan archipelago, just 22 miles from the city of Livorno, lies the tiny, often-windswept island of Gorgona. Visitors are drawn to its rugged beauty, and the isolated location promises not only a secluded getaway but also a behind-the-scenes glimpse at the unique work that goes on at the Gorgona […]

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One of New York’s Most Popular Hiking Destinations Is Getting an Eco Transformation

The Breakneck Ridge Trail is one of the most popular day hikes in not just New York state but the entire country — the New York-New Jersey Trail Conference estimated in 2018 that the destination receives around 100,000 visitors each year. That’s partially thanks to its proximity to the Big Apple: It takes under 90 […]

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Read more about the article What Was the First Human Pest? Scientists Pinpoint the Likely Culprit (That Still Bugs Us Today)
This photo taken on November 28, 2023 shows a researcher using tweezers to handle a bedbug as people attend a lecture on bedbug control at the Korea Pest Control Association (KPCA) in Seoul. South Korea has been largely bedbug-free for years, but it has seen a surge in infestations as travel has rebounded after the pandemic -- with more than 100 cases of the bloodsucking pests reported since late November, official statistics show. (Photo by Anthony WALLACE / AFP) / To go with AFP story SKorea-pests-bedbugs, FOCUS by Claire Lee

What Was the First Human Pest? Scientists Pinpoint the Likely Culprit (That Still Bugs Us Today)

Our planet is home to around 1 million known insect species, and about 1%-3% of them are considered pests, per the National Pesticide Information Center. But which one has been bugging humans the longest? A team of scientists led by two Virginia Tech researchers think they’ve figured it out: In a study published Wednesday, they suggest that bed bugs were the first human pest.

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Read more about the article “Shark Spy Technology”: Why Massachusetts Scientists Will Tag Sharks With Cameras This Summer
A great white shark swimming with a slight smile on its face just below the surface. The environment is the deep blue ocean. The shark looks to be in hunting mode.

“Shark Spy Technology”: Why Massachusetts Scientists Will Tag Sharks With Cameras This Summer

Forget shark week — it’s shark season in New England. The first great white sighting of the season was confirmed May 11 when a seal with a shark bite washed ashore on Nantucket in Massachusetts, and for the second year in a row, researchers in the state will be using an innovative method to help […]

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Ancient Pollen Reveals Stories About Earth’s History, From the Asteroid Strike That Killed the Dinosaurs to the Mayan Collapse

If pollen allergies are getting to you, you are not alone. Every year, plants release billions of pollen grains into the air, specks of male reproductive material that many of us notice only when we get watery eyes and runny noses. However, pollen grains are far more than allergens — they are nature’s time capsules, preserving clues about Earth’s past environments for millions of years.

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Denali National Park’s Sled Dog “Puppy Cam” Is Live: Meet This Year’s Litter

Stop the presses! There’s another animal live stream to get glued to, and this one features some adorable future heroes: the next generation of sled dogs at Alaska’s Denali National Park. The Denali Sled Dog Kennels’ seasonal “Puppy Cam” is turned on when the newest recruits to the mushing squad are old enough to wander […]

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Read more about the article A Couple Created Scotland’s First “Champagne” — From Grapes Grown in an Old Potato Field
Lorna Jackson who is producing sparkling wine on an old potato field using Scottish-grown grapes from her farm in St Boswells in the Borders. Creating Borders Bubbly. Release date – June 6, 2025. A couple have created Scotland's first 'Bubbly' - a sparkling wine made from grapes grown on an old potato field. Lorna and Trevor Jackson planted their vineyard after they were left with a spare plot on their farm in the Scottish Borders. After several scorching summers due to global warming the couple thought the vines would have a better chance to grow. The site in in St Boswells is currently Scotland’s only outdoor vineyard successfully producing grapes to make wine. And now after eight years they have used Scottish-grown grapes to created their first bottles of 'Borders Bubbly'.

A Couple Created Scotland’s First “Champagne” — From Grapes Grown in an Old Potato Field

A married couple who created Scotland’s first “champagne” from grapes grown on an old potato field finally took a sip of the bubbly beverage to toast their granddaughter’s first birthday — and they said it has a “light and fruity taste.”

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For the First Time in Years, a Rare “Ghost Elephant” Was Spotted on Camera

It’s not every day a ghost is caught on camera, and this one has a trunk, tusk, and large ears. An elusive elephant dubbed a “ghost elephant” was spotted by a camera trap in Senegal’s Niokolo-Koba National Park. The animal is a critically endangered African forest elephant, so this sighting is energizing conservationists about saving […]

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The Annual Beluga Cam Is Now Live — And You Can Join the Ranks as a Citizen Scientist

Each year on July 15, Polar Bears International hosts Arctic Sea Ice Day to raise awareness about the Arctic and the threats it faces — particularly that it may be warming four times faster than the rest of the planet. Sea ice is critical for a number of species, including polar bears and beluga whales, and […]

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Read more about the article Hummingbirds Migrate Thousands of Miles Every Year — Get a Nourishing Nectar Recipe for Your Garden
A Costa's hummingbird at a backyard feeder in the winter in the Sonoran Desert region of Arizona.

Hummingbirds Migrate Thousands of Miles Every Year — Get a Nourishing Nectar Recipe for Your Garden

When the weather turns frigid, there’s no greater joy than traveling to a warmer climate to soak up some vitamin D. Hummingbirds feel this way too — but they’re not just looking for a little sun on their backs. Because their search for food is limited by decreasing daylight hours in late summer and early […]

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Read more about the article By Turning Hard Facts Into Soft Jazz, Students Aim to Save Florida’s Declining Oyster Population — Listen to the Tune
Oyster on hand dirty

By Turning Hard Facts Into Soft Jazz, Students Aim to Save Florida’s Declining Oyster Population — Listen to the Tune

Jazz is notoriously divisive, but no matter how you feel about smooth saxophone and swinging piano, you can’t argue with the impact of one new entry in the genre: “Oysters Ain’t Safe,” composed and performed by students and faculty at St. Petersburg’s University of South Florida. In a project helmed by Assistant Professor of Anthropology […]

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