My algae! Didymosphenia geminata, currently clogging rivers in New Brunswick and Quebec. I will be recreating the past climate and examining possible changes that may be contributing to the recent algal blooms. I AM EXCITED.

My algae! Didymosphenia geminata, currently clogging rivers in New Brunswick and Quebec. I will be recreating the past climate and examining possible changes that may be contributing to the recent algal blooms. I AM EXCITED.

Click through for PROJECT PRESSURE: A visual time capsule documenting the world’s glaciers.

Click through for PROJECT PRESSURE: A visual time capsule documenting the world’s glaciers.

// Saving the Experimental Lakes Area: What can you do? //

http://saveela.org/

If you’re Canadian, PLEASE sign the Public Petition. It will be presented to the House of Commons, and may make some impact.

In addition, try to arrange a meeting with your MP or write a strongly worded personal letter.

(Source: earth-song)

(Source: wildered, via earth-ism)

(Source: theanimalblog)

The annual destruction of the Amazon rainforest is tallied every August and announced to a world sadly accustomed to the idea that its greatest tropical forest is being wiped off the face of the Earth. Invariably, the area of destruction is so large that the loss is expressed in terms of states or countries—a Vermont here, an Ireland there—roughly equivalent measures meant to make the scale of the catastrophe more readily apprehensible, as if all of us could say, for example, that this many Connecticuts make a Texas or that there are so many Switzerlands to a France. Oddly, the effect of the news seemed to be a lulling of concern, as if the Amazon could go on disappearing indefinitely, without ever actually doing so.
the two things I love most; the environment and looking pretty