Top Environment Stories
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ENVIRONMENT
Sick From Fracking? Doctors, Patients Seek AnswersMysterious fumes wafting in from outside have repeatedly sickened several nurses at a rural Pennsylvania health clinic, forcing the clinic to temporarily relocate. Like many other people living near gas wells around the country, the clinic's staff wonders whether the industry in their backyard is making them sick.ENVIRONMENT
Recipe For Safer Drinking Water? Add Sun, Salt And LimeAdding dirt and salt can help make drinking water cleaner, and is far cheaper than fancy filtration systems for getting rid of harmful bacteria, scientists say. It just takes a little patience and the sun. |
Town's Effort To Link Fracking And Illness Falls ShortDespite residents' fears, scientists say they can't link health woes to gas wells in Dish, Texas.Medical Records Could Yield Answers On FrackingResearchers plan to mine 10 years of data on people who live near the Marcellus Shale gas wells.
A quest to find answers on fracking pollution becomes too polarizing to pursue.
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Also in Environment
120 Giants Found Living With 86 Year Old Man
What inspired 86-year-old Brendon Grimshaw to buy an island in the Indian Ocean, replant it with 16,000 trees, grasses and lure a bunch of giant tortoises to live with him? - READ MOREHear That? Annoying Hum Has Canada Making Noise
The residents of Windsor, Ontario, say they're being invaded by an irritating sound that's emanating from outside Detroit. It's known as the "Windsor Hum" and, with U.S. officials claiming Americans can't hear it, no one seems to know who should be in charge of shutting it up. - READ MORE
'Frankenfish': It's What's For Dinner
Snakeheads came to Maryland almost 10 years ago. More people are acquiring a taste for the fish, some to help curb the invasive species' population. But they're kind of pricey. Plus, they're called "snakeheads" and look like Jacques Cousteau's nightmares. So a lot of them are still swimming around. - READ MORE
Iraq's Oil Boom And The Global Market
In a remarkable shift, Iraq's oil exports jumped by 20 percent since January, and the country exported more oil in April than in any month since Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait in 1990. Energy expert Daniel Yergin discusses how Iraq's oil wealth is driving the Iraqi economy and reshaping the global oil market. - READ MOREDrilling Boom Strains State Regulatory Agencies
Cash-strapped states are embracing the millions of dollars in new tax revenue coming from shale oil and gas development. But there aren't enough inspectors to make sure the sites aren't polluting. The problem seems especially apparent in Colorado, which now has more than 47,000 active oil and gas wells but the state employs just 17 inspectors. - READ MOREFracking: New Rules Aim To Bring 'Best Practices' To Public Lands
Among the proposals: Requiring companies that are extracting natural gas to disclose the chemicals they use. - READ MOREGauging Public Opinion on Climate Change Policy
Majorities of Americans say that global warming and clean energy should be among the nation's priorities, according to a new survey. Will those feelings translate into any action in the government? Anthony Leiserowitz of the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication discusses the survey's findings. - READ MOREIs Thorium A Magic Bullet For Our Energy Problems?
As the search for cheap, safe and non-carbon emitting sources of energy continues, a band of scientists say the answer may be nuclear reactors fueled by thorium. Others caution that thorium reactors pose waste and proliferation risks. Ira Flatow and guests discuss the pros and cons of thorium reactors. - READ MOREGreenland's Ice Melting Slower Than Expected
Koalas Are So Cute! (And Threatened)
According to National Geographic, and now the Australian government, the country's cutest symbol is at risk. - READ MORE|
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