Home Publications List
Publication display API.
This one is used to display publications on the home page.
GET /api/organization/section/home/publications?format=api&offset=10240&ordering=-text
{ "count": 10575, "next": "http://onegeo.com/api/organization/section/home/publications?format=api&limit=20&offset=10260&ordering=-text", "previous": "http://onegeo.com/api/organization/section/home/publications?format=api&limit=20&offset=10220&ordering=-text", "results": [ { "id": "e5030e54-570f-4ec8-b1c8-93a607b477be", "slug": "ai-toys-are-all-the-rage-in-chinaand-now-theyre-appearing-on-shelves-in-the-us-too-by-caiwei-chenarchive-page-for-mit-technology-review-post", "created_at": "2025-11-12T05:34:06.519007Z", "views": 15, "name": "AI toys are all the rage in China—and now they’re appearing on shelves in the US too | by Caiwei Chenarchive page for MIT Technology Review", "about": "AI-powered toys that let stuffed animals talk are booming in China and expanding globally, offering interactive, screen-free play, but their novelty often fades quickly due to glitches and limited engagement.", "text": "A new wave of AI-powered toys is letting children interact with stuffed animals that can talk back, with China leading the boom: the market is expected to surpass $14 billion by 2030, supported by over 1,500 AI toy companies. Products like BubblePal and FoloToy let kids hear characters speak or even train toys to mimic their parents’ voices, and some are already expanding internationally.\n\nThis trend builds on China’s long history of child-focused electronics, but US companies like Mattel and ventures like Grok are entering the market as well. While parents appreciate screen-free interaction and safety features, reviews show AI toys can be glitchy, slow, or unengaging, and many children quickly lose interest, limiting their practical appeal despite the novelty.", "link_original": "https://www.technologyreview.com/2025/10/07/1125191/ai-toys-in-china/", "status": 2, "country": [ { "id": 49, "name": "China", "icon": "" } ], "sections": [ { "id": 56, "name": "Eco-friendly consumer goods" } ], "root_section": { "id": 51, "name": "Industrial Revolution" }, "is_photo": false, "is_video": false, "is_large_font": false, "show_in_news_list": false, "url_to_show_in_news_list": "", "location_filters": { "countries": [ { "id": 49, "name": "China" } ], "regions": [ { "id": 5, "name": "Asia" } ] }, "filters": [] }, { "id": "3b1a6bb5-6bf1-4cde-b3d8-3a052e335221", "slug": "gordon-and-betty-moore-foundation-published-information-about-a-new-technology-to-take-the-salt-out-of-salt-water-for-deliver-more-drinkable-water-post", "created_at": "2023-08-12T21:15:10.539034Z", "views": 36, "name": "Gordon and Betty Moore foundation published information about a new technology to take the salt out of salt water for deliver more drinkable water", "about": "Gordon and Betty Moore foundation published information about a new technology to take the salt out of salt water for deliver more drinkable water", "text": "A new technology sustainable, solar-energy-conversion technology into a specific type of electricity for desalinization of sea water was proposed by Ardo, an assistant professor of chemistry at the University of California, Irvine, and his team of researchers. This technology was more efficiently and cost effectively than competing solar-based technologies. Results of his research were published in the journal, Joule. \nArdo and his team of researchers demonstrated is the ability to take sunlight and convert it into electricity through ion motion. Rather than use traditional solar cells to generate electricity, Ardo's team used sunlight to directly drive ion transport. This invention is a first step toward a more efficient, cost-effective simple way to produce potable water. And, it is an example of how a modest investment in early-career scientist-inventors, through programs like the Moore Inventor Fellows, can accelerate research for the benefit of society", "link_original": "https://www.moore.org/article-detail?newsUrlName=a-new-technology-to-take-the-salt-out-of-salt-water-and-deliver-more-drinkable-water", "status": 2, "country": [ { "id": 240, "name": "United States of America", "icon": "" } ], "sections": [ { "id": 38, "name": "Global water crisis" } ], "root_section": { "id": 107, "name": "Life-friendly Earth" }, "is_photo": false, "is_video": false, "is_large_font": false, "show_in_news_list": false, "url_to_show_in_news_list": "", "location_filters": { "countries": [ { "id": 240, "name": "United States of America" } ], "regions": [] }, "filters": [] }, { "id": "bb027a57-3129-49dc-9625-6073a04e4075", "slug": "vast-majority-of-americans-oppose-national-park-cuts-new-poll-finds-i-by-owen-clarke-for-outside-interactive-post", "created_at": "2025-11-17T15:50:54.735785Z", "views": 20, "name": "Vast Majority of Americans Oppose National Park Cuts, New Poll Finds I by Owen Clarke for Outside Interactive", "about": "Most Americans reject the planned reductions to the National Park Service’s funding and workforce.", "text": "A new survey shows that Americans strongly oppose the federal government’s proposed cuts to the National Park Service. The poll, conducted by the National Parks Conservation Association and YouGov, found broad resistance to the Trump Administration’s plan to reduce the 2026 budget by one billion dollars, remove historical signs and materials, open land near parks to mining or drilling, and cut more staff. The association notes that support for national parks remains bipartisan, echoing decades of polling with high public approval. The recent forty-three-day government shutdown, which left parks open but understaffed and unable to collect visitor fees, highlighted how funding shortages strain park operations and threaten the protection of natural landscapes and historical sites.", "link_original": "https://www.outsideonline.com/outdoor-adventure/environment/national-park-cuts-poll/", "status": 2, "country": [ { "id": 240, "name": "United States of America", "icon": "" } ], "sections": [ { "id": 119, "name": "National parks" } ], "root_section": { "id": 108, "name": "Conserving Wild Nature" }, "is_photo": true, "is_video": false, "is_large_font": false, "show_in_news_list": true, "url_to_show_in_news_list": "https://onegeo.com/bucket/media/section_publication_photo/1026de8d-c9c8-4d8d-b513-3c75ba0253cf", "location_filters": { "countries": [ { "id": 240, "name": "United States of America" } ], "regions": [ { "id": 4, "name": "North America" } ] }, "filters": [ { "id": 13, "name": "Media content", "badge_name": "Media content", "show_badge": false, "children": [ { "id": 14, "name": "Photo", "badge_name": "Photo", "show_badge": false, "children": [] } ], "all_children": false, "all_children_ids": "14,15,16" } ] }, { "id": "3686bc1b-97b5-4061-9c9d-08419760cfdb", "slug": "research-wealthy-people-more-likely-to-exercise-fit-tech-post", "created_at": "2025-11-18T14:49:32.899661Z", "views": 25, "name": "Research: Wealthy people more likely to exercise | Fit tech", "about": "Higher earners are more likely to act like ‘weekend warriors’ – cramming physical activity into fewer days – than those on a lower income, a study finds", "text": "A new study published in the journal Preventative Medicine suggests that while finding the time to exercise is problematic for both high and low earners, individuals with the highest income levels overcome this hurdle by doing the recommended amount of weekly activity in just a few days a week.\n\nThe study found that those earning at least $75,000 per year completed, on average, 4.6 more daily minutes of moderate to vigorous intensity physical activity than participants who earned less than $20,000 per year.\n\nMore interesting, perhaps, was the discovery that those in the highest income group were 60 per cent more likely to meet the World Health Organization’s (WHO) weekly physical activity guideline of at least 150 minutes of moderate or vigorous intensity physical activity over a two-day period than those in the lowest income group.", "link_original": "https://www.fittechglobal.com/fit-tech-features/Research-Wealthy-weekend-warriors/32118", "status": 2, "country": [], "sections": [ { "id": 10, "name": "Lifestyle that empowers" } ], "root_section": { "id": 1, "name": "Enlightened Humanity" }, "is_photo": false, "is_video": false, "is_large_font": false, "show_in_news_list": false, "url_to_show_in_news_list": "", "location_filters": { "countries": [], "regions": [ { "id": 12, "name": "Global" } ] }, "filters": [] }, { "id": "bfce04f0-d361-4eab-8c8d-bff97eff1e3a", "slug": "down-to-earth-indian-ocean-is-heating-up-much-faster-than-we-think-at-a-rate-of-17-38c-per-century-post", "created_at": "2024-07-05T12:36:01.852467Z", "views": 44, "name": "Down to Earth: Indian Ocean is heating up much faster than we think, at a rate of 1.7-3.8°C per century", "about": "The Indian Ocean is experiencing unprecedented and accelerated warming, which may continue throughout the century unless greenhouse gases (GHGs) are reduced immediately.", "text": "A new study published in journal Science Direct has predicted that between 2020 and 2100, the Indian Ocean could warm at a rate of 1.7-3.8 degrees Celsius per century. This could lead to widespread socio-economic impacts, along with significant effects on biodiversity, especially on coral reefs. If GHGs are emitted at current levels, the minimum SSTs in the Indian Ocean could exceed 28°C (28.5-30.7°C) all year round by the end of the 21st century, according to the study. Generally, SSTs above 28°C are conducive to the formation of tropical cyclones and extremely heavy rainfall. The increased ocean heat would also cause thermal expansion in the Indian Ocean, resulting in rising sea levels in the 40 countries that border it. Marine heatwaves lead to habitat destruction through coral bleaching, seagrass loss and the degradation of kelp forests, adversely affecting the fisheries sector.", "link_original": "https://www.downtoearth.org.in/climate-change/high-seas-treaty-expected-to-enter-force-by-2024-should-address-climate-impacts-on-migratory-marine-species-experts", "status": 2, "country": [], "sections": [ { "id": 162, "name": "The Indian Ocean" } ], "root_section": { "id": 107, "name": "Life-friendly Earth" }, "is_photo": false, "is_video": false, "is_large_font": false, "show_in_news_list": false, "url_to_show_in_news_list": "", "location_filters": { "countries": [], "regions": [] }, "filters": [] }, { "id": "48f8568f-a795-4637-b8f3-22d328093088", "slug": "sea-levels-are-risingbut-in-greenland-they-will-fall-by-state-of-the-planet-for-physorg-post", "created_at": "2026-01-28T12:24:25.633630Z", "views": 7, "name": "Sea levels are rising—but in Greenland, they will fall | by State of the Planet for Phys.org", "about": "New research shows that while global seas rise, sea levels around Greenland are projected to fall by up to several meters by 2100, driven by rapid land uplift and reduced gravitational pull as the ice sheet melts.", "text": "A new study published in Nature Communications finds that, unlike most of the world, Greenland is likely to experience falling sea levels as the climate warms. The drop is driven by glacial isostatic adjustment: as the Greenland Ice Sheet rapidly loses mass, the land beneath it rebounds upward, and the ice sheet’s weakened gravitational pull allows nearby ocean water to recede. Using geological records of past sea levels and more than 20 years of satellite data from communication towers across Greenland, researchers show that Earth’s response to ice loss is faster than previously assumed. Their models project sea level fall of about 0.9 meters by 2100 under low emissions and up to 2.5 meters under high emissions. \n\nThese localized changes could affect coastal infrastructure, shipping, fisheries, and possibly glacier stability, highlighting the need for region-specific sea level projections.", "link_original": "https://phys.org/news/2026-01-sea-greenland-fall.html", "status": 2, "country": [ { "id": 89, "name": "Greenland", "icon": "" } ], "sections": [ { "id": 168, "name": "Hydrosphere" } ], "root_section": { "id": 107, "name": "Life-friendly Earth" }, "is_photo": false, "is_video": false, "is_large_font": false, "show_in_news_list": false, "url_to_show_in_news_list": "", "location_filters": { "countries": [ { "id": 89, "name": "Greenland" } ], "regions": [ { "id": 11, "name": "The Arctic Ocean" } ] }, "filters": [] }, { "id": "73bb9073-3494-4266-a401-28e7255a6b51", "slug": "new-study-from-chapman-university-reveals-rapid-return-of-water-from-ground-to-atmosphere-through-plants-post", "created_at": "2025-01-10T10:37:37.961781Z", "views": 27, "name": "New Study From Chapman University Reveals Rapid Return of Water from Ground to Atmosphere through Plants", "about": "Research reshapes understanding of terrestrial water cycle, implications for climate and ecosystem health", "text": "A new study led by scientists in the Schmid College of Science and Technology at Chapman University provides the first comprehensive global estimates of the amount of water stored in Earth’s plants and the amount of time it takes for that water to flow through them. The information is a missing piece of the puzzle in understanding the global water cycle and how that cycle is being altered by changes in land use and climate. \n\nThe study finds that Earth's vegetation stores about 786 km³ of water, just 0.002% of total freshwater. The research shows that water moves quickly through plants, with transit times ranging from five days in croplands to 18 days in evergreen forests. Croplands, grasslands, and savannas have especially fast water turnover. In comparison, water in lakes takes 17 years to cycle, and in glaciers, up to 1,600 years. This highlights vegetation's dynamic role in the water cycle.", "link_original": "https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/01/250109183329.htm", "status": 2, "country": [], "sections": [ { "id": 168, "name": "Hydrosphere" } ], "root_section": { "id": 107, "name": "Life-friendly Earth" }, "is_photo": false, "is_video": false, "is_large_font": false, "show_in_news_list": false, "url_to_show_in_news_list": "", "location_filters": { "countries": [], "regions": [] }, "filters": [] }, { "id": "82064d6a-b269-42b8-8807-ff3bb0f11b96", "slug": "first-warm-blooded-dinosaurs-may-have-emerged-180-million-years-ago-by-university-college-london-for-sciencedaily-post", "created_at": "2025-08-25T07:28:51.634613Z", "views": 23, "name": "First 'warm-blooded' dinosaurs may have emerged 180 million years ago | by University College London for ScienceDaily", "about": "A new study suggests some dinosaurs developed warm-bloodedness in the Early Jurassic, helping them adapt to colder climates, while others like sauropods stayed in warmer regions with different strategies.", "text": "A new study led by researchers from University College London and the University of Vigo suggests that the ability to regulate body temperature, a trait seen in modern mammals and birds, may have first evolved in some dinosaurs during the Early Jurassic, about 180 million years ago. By analyzing more than one thousand fossils, climate models, and evolutionary data, the team found that theropods, which include the ancestors of birds, and ornithischians, a group of plant-eaters such as Triceratops and Stegosaurus, expanded into colder climates, indicating they may have developed warm-bloodedness. In contrast, sauropods such as Brontosaurus and Diplodocus remained in warmer regions, possibly relying on their enormous body size to conserve heat. The findings connect the evolution of temperature regulation to the Jenkyns event, a period of intense volcanic activity that caused global warming and extinctions.", "link_original": "https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/05/240515122659.htm", "status": 2, "country": [], "sections": [ { "id": 145, "name": "History of Earth: insights for the future" } ], "root_section": { "id": 107, "name": "Life-friendly Earth" }, "is_photo": false, "is_video": false, "is_large_font": false, "show_in_news_list": false, "url_to_show_in_news_list": "", "location_filters": { "countries": [], "regions": [ { "id": 12, "name": "Global" } ] }, "filters": [ { "id": 8, "name": "Enlightenment", "badge_name": "Enlightenment", "show_badge": false, "children": [ { "id": 27, "name": "Publications", "badge_name": "Publication", "show_badge": false, "children": [] } ], "all_children": false, "all_children_ids": "9,10,27,11,12" } ] }, { "id": "edb5d1f1-501b-42db-81f8-8c7d2beeb367", "slug": "new-research-sheds-light-on-earliest-days-of-earths-formation-by-emina-gamulin-york-university-for-post", "created_at": "2025-07-02T06:42:14.296715Z", "views": 23, "name": "New research sheds light on earliest days of Earth's formation | by Emina Gamulin for Phys.org", "about": "A York University study finds that Earth’s lower mantle solidified within its first 100 million years, forming through low-pressure crystal processes. The research challenges old assumptions and improves our models of how rocky planets like Earth evolve.", "text": "A new study led by York University professor Charles-Édouard Boukaré reveals that the structure of Earth's lower mantle likely solidified within the planet's first 100 million years. Published in Nature, this research combines fluid dynamics and geochemistry, showing that key features of Earth's interior formed early from low-pressure crystal formation—contradicting previous assumptions that high-pressure reactions dominated. Boukaré’s model simulates how early molten mantle cooled and crystallized, indicating that a planet's youthful conditions deeply influence its long-term structure. These findings refine our understanding of planetary evolution and may help predict how other rocky planets form and behave.", "link_original": "https://phys.org/news/2025-03-earliest-days-earth-formation.html", "status": 2, "country": [], "sections": [ { "id": 190, "name": "Evolution of the Universe: the origin of Earth" } ], "root_section": { "id": 107, "name": "Life-friendly Earth" }, "is_photo": false, "is_video": false, "is_large_font": false, "show_in_news_list": false, "url_to_show_in_news_list": "", "location_filters": { "countries": [], "regions": [ { "id": 12, "name": "Global" } ] }, "filters": [ { "id": 4, "name": "Websites", "badge_name": "Website", "show_badge": true, "children": [ { "id": 7, "name": "Other", "badge_name": null, "show_badge": false, "children": [] } ], "all_children": false, "all_children_ids": "5,6,7" }, { "id": 8, "name": "Enlightenment", "badge_name": "Enlightenment", "show_badge": false, "children": [ { "id": 27, "name": "Publications", "badge_name": "Publication", "show_badge": false, "children": [] } ], "all_children": false, "all_children_ids": "9,10,27,11,12" } ] }, { "id": "a8b0ab07-cc17-4a75-a973-27f3cc4c2dea", "slug": "virginia-tech-study-extends-chart-of-life-by-nearly-15-billion-years-by-kelly-izlar-for-virginia-tech-news-post", "created_at": "2025-04-16T09:42:16.949602Z", "views": 16, "name": "Virginia Tech study extends chart of life by nearly 1.5 billion years | by Kelly Izlar for Virginia Tech News", "about": "Ancient species may have evolved slower and lasted longer, but the pace of evolution accelerated after global ice ages, according to a new Virginia Tech analysis.", "text": "A new study led by Virginia Tech geobiologist Shuhai Xiao has extended the timeline of life’s evolution back nearly 2 billion years into the Proterozoic Eon. Using fossil records of ancient marine eukaryotes, the research charts the rise, stability, and post-glaciation diversification of early life. It shows that eukaryotic diversity was stable during the so-called “boring billion” (1.45 to 0.72 billion years ago), then surged after dramatic ice ages. This study offers key insights into how environmental changes, like global glaciation, influenced early evolution.", "link_original": "https://news.vt.edu/articles/2024/12/science-extended-chart-of-life.html?utm_source=chatgpt.com", "status": 2, "country": [], "sections": [ { "id": 145, "name": "History of Earth: insights for the future" } ], "root_section": { "id": 107, "name": "Life-friendly Earth" }, "is_photo": true, "is_video": false, "is_large_font": false, "show_in_news_list": false, "url_to_show_in_news_list": "", "location_filters": { "countries": [], "regions": [ { "id": 12, "name": "Global" } ] }, "filters": [] }, { "id": "7d1a2897-d23e-4ea9-9921-c1d2d6ebc79b", "slug": "rising-surface-salinity-and-declining-sea-ice-a-new-southern-ocean-state-revealed-by-satellites-by-alessandro-silvano-and-others-for-national-academy-of-sciences-post", "created_at": "2025-07-18T06:52:30.156439Z", "views": 26, "name": "Rising surface salinity and declining sea ice: A new Southern Ocean state revealed by satellites | by Alessandro Silvano and others for National Academy of Sciences", "about": "New satellite data shows the Southern Ocean’s surface is becoming saltier since 2015, reversing decades of freshening and driving record sea ice loss and reemerging open-ocean polynyas.", "text": "A new study led by Alessandro Silvano and colleagues reveals that the polar Southern Ocean, which had freshened for decades, has reversed course since 2015. Satellite and Argo float data show a marked rise in surface salinity across the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, weakening upper-ocean stratification and coinciding with record lows in Antarctic sea ice. This shift enhances heat exchange, accelerates sea ice melt, and has allowed rare open-ocean polynyas to reappear. The findings challenge climate model projections of continued freshening and highlight surface salinity as a key fingerprint for monitoring sea ice changes. Sustained satellite observations are now vital for tracking this unprecedented ocean–ice regime shift.", "link_original": "https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2500440122", "status": 2, "country": [ { "id": 240, "name": "United States of America", "icon": "" } ], "sections": [ { "id": 163, "name": "The Southern Ocean" } ], "root_section": { "id": 107, "name": "Life-friendly Earth" }, "is_photo": false, "is_video": false, "is_large_font": false, "show_in_news_list": false, "url_to_show_in_news_list": "", "location_filters": { "countries": [ { "id": 240, "name": "United States of America" } ], "regions": [ { "id": 10, "name": "The Southern Ocean" } ] }, "filters": [ { "id": 8, "name": "Enlightenment", "badge_name": "Enlightenment", "show_badge": false, "children": [ { "id": 27, "name": "Publications", "badge_name": "Publication", "show_badge": false, "children": [] } ], "all_children": false, "all_children_ids": "9,10,27,11,12" } ] }, { "id": "d5ef8a52-196b-445b-982a-1c53f5d6c6ea", "slug": "massive-system-of-rotating-ocean-currents-in-the-north-atlantic-is-behaving-strangely-and-it-may-be-reaching-a-tipping-point-by-sascha-pare-for-livescience-post", "created_at": "2025-10-10T12:00:50.464200Z", "views": 17, "name": "Massive system of rotating ocean currents in the North Atlantic is behaving strangely — and it may be reaching a tipping point | by Sascha Pare for LiveScience", "about": "An analysis of clam shells suggests the North Atlantic subpolar gyre has had two periods of destabilization over the past 150 years: one around 1920 and the other from 1950 through present.", "text": "A new study indicates that the North Atlantic subpolar gyre, a key component of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) that helps transport heat to the Northern Hemisphere, has been losing stability since the 1950s and may be approaching a tipping point. Researchers analyzed clam shells to reconstruct 150 years of ocean conditions and found signs of ongoing instability, suggesting that the gyre could weaken significantly in the coming decades. Such a weakening could trigger more extreme weather in Europe and alter global precipitation patterns, similar—though less severe—to the impacts of a full AMOC collapse. While the gyre’s collapse is unlikely due to partial wind-driven circulation, scientists warn that its destabilization poses serious climate risks, emphasizing the need for further monitoring and study.", "link_original": "https://www.livescience.com/planet-earth/rivers-oceans/massive-system-of-rotating-ocean-currents-in-the-north-atlantic-is-behaving-strangely-and-it-may-be-reaching-a-tipping-point?utm_", "status": 2, "country": [], "sections": [ { "id": 161, "name": "The Atlantic Ocean" } ], "root_section": { "id": 107, "name": "Life-friendly Earth" }, "is_photo": false, "is_video": false, "is_large_font": false, "show_in_news_list": false, "url_to_show_in_news_list": "", "location_filters": { "countries": [], "regions": [ { "id": 8, "name": "The Atlantic Ocean" } ] }, "filters": [] }, { "id": "ec7b7689-979d-4de4-b912-92d998c1f102", "slug": "part-of-the-antarctic-ice-sheet-has-grown-but-we-still-need-to-protect-the-region-by-sarah-meadows-post", "created_at": "2025-07-03T10:10:28.568293Z", "views": 25, "name": "Part of the Antarctic Ice Sheet has grown, but we still need to protect the region | By Sarah Meadows for The Regents of the University of Michigan", "about": "New research shows the Eastern Antarctic Ice Sheet is growing for the first time in decades, offering hope for ice recovery. However, urgent global action is needed to sustain this trend and combat continued melting in the vulnerable western region.", "text": "A new study from Tongji University reveals the Eastern Antarctic Ice Sheet (EAIS) grew by 108 gigatons annually from 2021–2023, reversing a previous trend of ice loss. This unexpected growth, likely due to increased precipitation, offers hope that Antarctic ice can recover. However, the Western Antarctic, home to the rapidly melting Thwaites \"Doomsday Glacier,\" remains at high risk. Scientists stress that global policy, environmental treaties, and everyday climate-conscious actions are essential to preserving this fragile progress. Current protections, like the Paris Agreement and Antarctic Treaty, must be expanded—especially Marine Protected Areas, which currently safeguard only a small portion of the Southern Ocean. Experimental geoengineering techniques are also under study. The contrasting trends in the east and west of the continent highlight both the urgent threats and the real potential for reversing ice loss through sustained global effort.", "link_original": "https://seas.umich.edu/news/part-antarctic-ice-sheet-has-grown-we-still-need-protect-region", "status": 2, "country": [], "sections": [ { "id": 157, "name": "Antarctica" } ], "root_section": { "id": 107, "name": "Life-friendly Earth" }, "is_photo": true, "is_video": false, "is_large_font": false, "show_in_news_list": true, "url_to_show_in_news_list": "https://onegeo.com/bucket/media/section_publication_photo/65940bc6-36d6-4ffa-b67b-64583e5cdf4f", "location_filters": { "countries": [], "regions": [ { "id": 14, "name": "Antarctica" } ] }, "filters": [ { "id": 13, "name": "Media content", "badge_name": "Media content", "show_badge": false, "children": [ { "id": 14, "name": "Photo", "badge_name": "Photo", "show_badge": false, "children": [] } ], "all_children": false, "all_children_ids": "14,15,16" } ] }, { "id": "a296e570-e385-4c1f-b088-8152b83fe487", "slug": "scientists-warn-a-very-deadly-poison-is-accumulating-in-global-rice-fields-by-eric-ralls-for-earthcom-post", "created_at": "2025-10-19T07:13:35.690680Z", "views": 42, "name": "Scientists warn a very deadly poison is accumulating in global rice fields | by Eric Ralls for Earth.com", "about": "Rice feeds billions. It thrives in warm, wet fields and stores energy in a way that fits busy lives and tight budgets. Those same flooded fields can also make arsenic more available to rice plants, and some of that arsenic can end up in the grain.", "text": "A new study from Columbia University and collaborators in China and the U.S., published in The Lancet Planetary Health, shows that climate change—warmer temperatures and higher CO₂—can increase arsenic uptake in rice, as flooded soils lose oxygen and release more arsenic for rice roots to absorb.\n\nField trials over roughly a decade using 28 rice varieties in outdoor Free-Air CO₂ Enrichment (FACE) systems revealed that mid-century climate conditions could raise inorganic arsenic in rice, significantly increasing lifetime cancer risks (lung and bladder) and non-cancer effects like heart disease and diabetes, especially in regions where rice is a daily staple and paddies remain flooded, such as southern China and Southeast Asia.", "link_original": "https://www.earth.com/news/king-of-poisons-arsenic-is-building-up-in-warming-rice-fields-around-the-world/?fbclid=IwY2xjawMZSmdleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHq5vnYYV3kcFMUlzObKJRhox8Xe7EZKdTp494FtiDdIiVh13v-VpJHbydJWZ_aem_I61IcHnGqTqce79kMuQH5g", "status": 2, "country": [ { "id": 49, "name": "China", "icon": "" } ], "sections": [ { "id": 77, "name": "Biotic resource production areas" } ], "root_section": { "id": 68, "name": "Sustainable Human Habitats" }, "is_photo": false, "is_video": false, "is_large_font": false, "show_in_news_list": false, "url_to_show_in_news_list": "", "location_filters": { "countries": [ { "id": 49, "name": "China" } ], "regions": [ { "id": 5, "name": "Asia" } ] }, "filters": [] }, { "id": "655b27a2-a00f-4854-aa88-f65cccb0996b", "slug": "8-things-to-know-about-new-research-on-earths-rapid-drying-and-the-loss-of-its-groundwater-propublica-post", "created_at": "2025-11-18T14:30:03.307484Z", "views": 26, "name": "8 Things to Know About New Research on Earth’s Rapid Drying and the Loss of Its Groundwater | ProPublica", "about": "Decades of NASA satellite data reveal how quickly the planet’s underground stores of fresh water have been depleted and how their use is contributing to rising sea levels. Here are the key takeaways.", "text": "A new study based on more than 20 years of NASA GRACE satellite data shows that Earth’s continents are drying at an alarming rate, with nearly 6 billion people living in countries experiencing a net loss of freshwater. Groundwater pumping is the main driver, responsible for about two-thirds of the decline at populated latitudes. Once removed, this water rarely returns to aquifers; instead, it flows to rivers and eventually the oceans, becoming a major source of sea level rise. As droughts intensify, farmers rely even more on groundwater, worsening depletion. \n\nThe study reveals that drying regions are merging into vast “mega-drying” zones across Europe, the Middle East, North Africa, Asia and the Americas. Many aquifers took millennia to form and cannot recover on human timescales. Researchers warn that accelerating water loss, combined with coastal flooding and food stress, could trigger widespread instability, migration and conflict.", "link_original": "https://www.propublica.org/article/groundwater-fresh-water-depletion-research-science-advances-takeaways", "status": 2, "country": [], "sections": [ { "id": 142, "name": "Groundwater" } ], "root_section": { "id": 107, "name": "Life-friendly Earth" }, "is_photo": false, "is_video": false, "is_large_font": false, "show_in_news_list": false, "url_to_show_in_news_list": "", "location_filters": { "countries": [], "regions": [ { "id": 5, "name": "Asia" }, { "id": 6, "name": "Africa" }, { "id": 4, "name": "North America" }, { "id": 2, "name": "South America" }, { "id": 3, "name": "Europe" } ] }, "filters": [] }, { "id": "69f47837-e7f0-46ea-aaf6-29738a95dd2c", "slug": "breakfreefromplastic-can-supermarkets-do-more-in-fighting-plastic-pollution-the-worlds-first-supermarkets-audits-seem-to-indicate-so-post", "created_at": "2025-11-05T09:00:21.646299Z", "views": 19, "name": "#BreakFreeFromPlastic: Can Supermarkets Do More In Fighting Plastic Pollution? The World's First Supermarkets Audits Seem to Indicate So", "about": "A new report audited 247 retailers in 27 countries to determine how supermarkets are contributing to or preventing plastic pollution with their business practices.", "text": "A new report ‘Supermarket Audits: Stores' Untapped Potential in Fighting Plastic Pollution’, issued by #BreakFreeFromPlastic,\nthe first-ever global snapshot of the retail sector’s business practices in stores, focusing on their pivotal role in the global plastic pollution crisis.\n\nFrom August 28 to November 15, 2024, 496 individual audits of 247 retailers in 27 countries were conducted by volunteers from BFFP member organisations, as part of the supermarket audits. Through this global citizen science initiative, BFFP found that stores are doing the bare minimum to reduce their single use plastic footprint, except where strong legislation compels them to.\n\nThe report calls on supermarkets to leverage their unique market position to implement comprehensive plastic reduction strategies – these can influence how and what consumers buy, and can reduce plastic waste generation and plastic pollution globally.", "link_original": "https://www.breakfreefromplastic.org/2025/09/16/press-release-supermarket-audits-2024/", "status": 2, "country": [], "sections": [ { "id": 58, "name": "Retailing: sustainable supply chains" } ], "root_section": { "id": 51, "name": "Industrial Revolution" }, "is_photo": true, "is_video": false, "is_large_font": false, "show_in_news_list": false, "url_to_show_in_news_list": "", "location_filters": { "countries": [], "regions": [ { "id": 12, "name": "Global" } ] }, "filters": [ { "id": 8, "name": "Enlightenment", "badge_name": "Enlightenment", "show_badge": false, "children": [ { "id": 27, "name": "Publications", "badge_name": "Publication", "show_badge": false, "children": [] } ], "all_children": false, "all_children_ids": "9,10,27,11,12" } ] }, { "id": "0d644161-5c7c-4343-bd88-35b595e94ac0", "slug": "latin-america-is-reframing-global-south-competitiveness-report-by-salome-beyer-velez-for-latin-america-reports-post", "created_at": "2025-10-20T11:48:47.512933Z", "views": 25, "name": "Latin America is reframing global south competitiveness: report | by Salome Beyer Velez for Latin America Reports", "about": "Latin America is emerging as a key force in reshaping global south competitiveness, driven by innovation, urban growth, and investment, as cities like São Paulo lead a tech-powered push toward global influence.", "text": "A new report by the SuperSymmetry Institute highlights Latin America’s growing role in global south competitiveness, contributing over two-thirds of its economic weight in the past two decades. At the Horasis Global Summit 2025, researchers identified five megatrends shaping cities: geopolitical tensions, rising economic influence, technological advances, urbanization, and climate pressures. São Paulo stands out as a regional growth leader, reflecting strong foreign investment potential and tech expansion—Brazil hosts 74% of Latin America’s deep tech firms. As cities face rapid urbanization and environmental challenges, innovation and sustainability have become key drivers. \n\nExperts urge Latin America to strengthen its competitive mindset, with the region now not just catching up but actively redefining global economic geography.", "link_original": "https://latinamericareports.com/latin-america-is-reframing-global-south-competitiveness-report/12565/", "status": 2, "country": [ { "id": 32, "name": "Brazil", "icon": "" } ], "sections": [ { "id": 156, "name": "South America" } ], "root_section": { "id": 107, "name": "Life-friendly Earth" }, "is_photo": false, "is_video": false, "is_large_font": false, "show_in_news_list": false, "url_to_show_in_news_list": "", "location_filters": { "countries": [ { "id": 32, "name": "Brazil" } ], "regions": [ { "id": 2, "name": "South America" } ] }, "filters": [] }, { "id": "6388e4c3-88d4-4e54-babd-acfdcbafab87", "slug": "fifty-years-of-technological-progress-bring-enhanced-geothermal-systems-to-the-cusp-of-large-scale-deployment-finds-new-clean-air-task-force-catf-report-post", "created_at": "2025-10-28T06:44:01.337878Z", "views": 42, "name": "Fifty years of technological progress bring Enhanced Geothermal Systems to the cusp of large-scale deployment, finds new Clean Air Task Force (CATF) report", "about": "Enhanced Geothermal Systems are on the brink of large-scale commercialization, with technological advances and emerging superhot rock reservoirs offering scalable, low-carbon, and reliable power if supported by sustained investment and policy.", "text": "A new report by the Clean Air Task Force (CATF) shows that Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS) are nearing large-scale commercialization after over 50 years of development. Drawing on 103 historical and current projects across 23 countries, the report highlights steady technological improvements and recent breakthroughs that could allow EGS to scale rapidly and cost-effectively with sustained policy support, investment, and research. Key advances include higher production temperatures, dramatic reductions in drilling costs, record-breaking flow rates, and growing confidence from power purchase agreements, alongside new revenue opportunities from direct heat, lithium extraction, and other co-products. The report also emphasizes the potential of emerging superhot rock EGS systems, which could tap supercritical reservoirs above 375°C to deliver vastly greater energy output, illustrating EGS’s promise as a scalable, low-carbon, and reliable power source for the future.", "link_original": "https://www.catf.us/2025/09/fifty-years-of-technological-progress-bring-enhanced-geothermal-systems-to-the-cusp-of-large-scale-deployment-finds-new-catf-report/", "status": 2, "country": [], "sections": [ { "id": 92, "name": "Geothermal energy" } ], "root_section": { "id": 51, "name": "Industrial Revolution" }, "is_photo": false, "is_video": false, "is_large_font": false, "show_in_news_list": false, "url_to_show_in_news_list": "", "location_filters": { "countries": [], "regions": [ { "id": 12, "name": "Global" } ] }, "filters": [ { "id": 8, "name": "Enlightenment", "badge_name": "Enlightenment", "show_badge": false, "children": [ { "id": 27, "name": "Publications", "badge_name": "Publication", "show_badge": false, "children": [] } ], "all_children": false, "all_children_ids": "9,10,27,11,12" } ] }, { "id": "38373857-98ea-4efe-88ce-4d8eb6b5ca2c", "slug": "can-the-global-green-energy-transition-bridge-the-18t-investment-gap-it-faces-11-september-2023-post", "created_at": "2023-09-20T07:14:59Z", "views": 53, "name": "Can the global green energy transition bridge the $18T investment gap it faces? (11 September, 2023)", "about": "According to the GreenBiz article by M. Holder, a recent report from Boston Consulting Group highlights that embracing renewable energy sources can effectively address the energy trilemma. But there is a need to increase renewable power sources by 2030.", "text": "A new report by Boston Consulting Group (BCG) indicates that an investment gap of $18 trillion needs to be bridged by 2030 to achieve the transition to green energy and limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius. According to the report, the transition away from fossil fuels requires a total investment of $37 trillion, with $19 trillion already committed, leaving a substantial $18 trillion gap. BCG recommends substantial investments in wind, solar, and grid storage capacities. The report also highlights the need for investments in bolstering electricity grids to accommodate increased solar and wind capacity and manage intermittent renewable power sources. Additionally, the report suggests that investments in green energy should accelerate the electrification of economies and a shift to renewable energy sources. Despite challenges, BCG believes that a green energy system can address the \"trilemma\" of sustainability, affordability, and security.", "link_original": "https://www.greenbiz.com/article/can-global-green-energy-transition-bridge-18t-investment-gap-it-faces", "status": 2, "country": [], "sections": [ { "id": 53, "name": "Toward clean energy" } ], "root_section": { "id": 51, "name": "Industrial Revolution" }, "is_photo": false, "is_video": false, "is_large_font": false, "show_in_news_list": false, "url_to_show_in_news_list": "", "location_filters": { "countries": [], "regions": [ { "id": 12, "name": "Global" } ] }, "filters": [] }, { "id": "4b6fb4ec-732b-4b79-82d4-d999cf9c9340", "slug": "digital-tar-pits-how-to-fight-back-against-ai-a-video-by-kyle-hill-post", "created_at": "2025-05-30T08:57:57.349083Z", "views": 18, "name": "Digital Tar Pits - How to Fight Back Against A.I. | a video by Kyle Hill", "about": "This video explores how a hacker named Aaron B created \"Nepenthees,\" a \"digital tarpit\" that traps and poisons AI data scrapers, slowing them down and feeding them nonsensical data as a form of resistance against unchecked AI data collection.", "text": "A new movement aimed at poisoning A.I. models like ChatGPT has gained traction after hackers have been attempting to trap said models in a never ending ‘Tar Pit’ of nonsense. After reading an Ars Technica interview, I tracked down a hacker developing tools to poison AI training data. Tools such as ‘Nepenthes’ are designed to confuse and corrupt the models that scrape the internet for their learning. 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