Students and schools across Georgia transformed into a day of meaningful community engagement as they participated in the ...
Earth Day 2026 has arrived with a wave of breakthroughs signaling that clean energy is moving fast from lab to real-world ...
Rain sounds maybe soothing for humans, but for plants, the pitter-patter of droplets is more like a jarring morning alarm. As ...
Millions of people around the world will pause Wednesday to mark Earth Day. Here are some actions people can partake in to ...
Heat isn’t the cause of bearing failure… it’s the confession that technicians didn’t act quickly enough when bearing color ...
On this quiet Friday morning, I met with Emma House, the lead curator of the exhibition Seeds of Exchange. We wandered around ...
George Hartfield, a longtime Lubbock resident, was diagnosed with a degenerative disease in his mid-30s that left him in ...
Stacy Fisher with The Spruce writes: “Upcycle an old, thrifted patio chair into a vibrant garden design idea. A few coats of ...
An exhibition at Desert Botanical Garden in Phoenix explores the tension that comes when humans and nature collide.
A multiyear, University of Minnesota-led study of the Twin Cities illuminates urban environmental challenges and solutions.
The pungent flower in question is a tropical plant called titan arum (Amorphophallus titanum), a species of corpse flower.
The largest restored wetlands in Massachusetts now cover hundreds of acres of what used to be cranberry farms. Glorianna Davenport sold her family's cranberry bogs for restoration, and what's ...