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The Hot Zone: Anthrax trailer released by National Geographic
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The Hot Zone: Anthrax Shares Intense, Full-Length Trailer Ahead of Thanksgiving Debut
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Less than 1% probability that Earth s energy imbalance increase occurred naturally, say Princeton and GFDL scientists
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Editor s Note: This story was initially published in Project Citizen: Climate 360, a collaboration between a diverse group of students from across the United States devoted to reporting on climate change.Â
Jade Cave has lived near the ocean since her family moved to Fiji, a small island in the South Pacific, when she was 6 years old.
âI was raised by a community of people whose history and culture are directly linked to the ocean,â Cave said. âIt was a fundamental aspect of the identity of the country that raised me.â
Now 17 and a resident of Cape Town, South Africa, Cave has continued to observe the impacts the ocean has on her life.
The hidden life of an ecosystem engineer
Morgan Kelly, High Meadows Environmental Institute
June 1, 2021 10:15 a.m.
For his senior thesis, Joe Kawalec of the Class of 2021, who graduated Princeton with a bachelor’s degree in ecology and evolutionary biology with a certificate in environmental studies, studied the natural camouflage of downy woodpeckers to understand how it helps the small bird survive in its forest habitat.
Photo by
Morgan Kelly, High Meadows Environmental Institute
The two years Princeton senior Joe Kawalec spent studying the natural camouflage of the ubiquitous downy woodpecker oddly enough began and ended the same way tracing the outlines of birds.