Sustainability
A Timely Reminder About The One Threat To Us All
It's still a collosal problem. And we are stuck between rocks and hardplaces, and getting more trapped by the year. And while everybody wants to scream, yell, and pound their fists about every other issue they claim to care about, people have slowly begun to voice their feelings much less about how petroleum is both pivotal to our existence, and a source of our problems.
By The Man Behind The Maskabout 19 hours ago in Earth
Fast Radio Burst 121102
In 2012, astronomers detected a millisecond burst of radio energy more powerful than anything our Sun produces in an entire day, and when it kept repeating from the same spot in deep space, we realized something extraordinary was sending us signals we cannot explain.
By The Curious Writera day ago in Earth
Oil Shock, Solar Surge
This conflict-driven oil shock (Feb–Mar 2026) closed the Strait of Hormuz and cut about 25% of global oil and gas supplies[1]. Prices spiked (Brent ~$100) and Gulf fields shut in[2]. Experts say this crisis proves why renewable energy (solar, wind, batteries, hydrogen) must now be fast-tracked to secure power and cut emissions[3][1].
By Futoshi Tachinoa day ago in Earth
Environmental Volunteering in Sri Lanka
Reforestation and tree planting is one of the best ways to give back to nature. When you travel, you contribute to air pollution in a very big way. Emissions from air travel being one of the main contributors of global warming, everyone who travel should find a way to at least compensate for some of the pollution they are responsible for.
By Jayantha Wijesingha2 days ago in Earth
How to Determine If Your Biochar is High Quality: A Guide to the Key Indicators. AI-Generated.
Biochar production is surging in popularity, driven by its applications in agriculture, carbon sequestration, and industrial filtration. However, not all biochar is created equal. If you have just pulled a batch from your kiln or received a shipment from a supplier, how can you tell if it is actually high quality?
By Bestonpyrolysis2 days ago in Earth
The Wow! Signal
How a 72-second radio burst from deep space shocked SETI scientists and remains unexplained after 47 years On August 15, 1977, at 11:16 PM Eastern time, the Big Ear radio telescope at Ohio State University detected a radio signal from space so powerful, so precisely tuned, and so apparently artificial that astronomer Jerry Ehman, reviewing the computer printout data the next day, circled the signal's alphanumeric designation and wrote "Wow!" in red pen in the margin, giving the transmission its now-famous name and creating what remains the most compelling potential evidence of extraterrestrial intelligence ever detected despite nearly five decades of attempts to find the signal again or explain it through natural phenomena. The signal lasted exactly seventy-two seconds, the maximum time any object could be observed by the Big Ear telescope as Earth's rotation carried that section of sky through the telescope's field of view, and it was detected at a frequency of 1420 megahertz, the exact frequency that hydrogen atoms emit radiation, and this frequency is significant because hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe and because international agreements prohibit terrestrial radio transmissions at this frequency precisely because scientists believe any intelligent civilization would use this frequency for interstellar communication, making it the logical channel to monitor when searching for alien signals.
By The Curious Writer2 days ago in Earth
Hormuz on Fire
Hormuz on Fire The narrow waters of the Strait of Hormuz have once again become one of the most dangerous flashpoints on Earth. Located between Iran and the Arabian Peninsula, this strategic passage connects the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman and ultimately to the global ocean. Though small in size, the strait carries enormous global importance. Nearly one-fifth of the world’s oil supply passes through this narrow corridor every day.
By Wings of Time 2 days ago in Earth
The Moment Between Rest and Breakthrough
Why Being “Busy” Isn’t Always Moving Forward Lately, I’ve been looking at the sky more than usual. My daughter has started a little routine every evening. She runs outside and asks in her tiny voice, “Mommy, where’s the moon?” Then she squints into the fading light, searching for the first tiny spark of what she calls the sparkling stars.
By Noman Khan 4 days ago in Earth






