During hospital stay, Jon started a list called "Things I Keep Wanting and Not Doing" in his journal. He wanted to get peacocks for his birthday, but leukemia has changed his treatment plans and he will start two new chemotherapy drugs tomorrow. He had grand summer plans, including a month-long painting residency in Europe, an apprenticeship with someone he admire, and time spent resting.
Permian-Triassic extinction event, called the Great Dying, wiped out about 96% of marine species and 70% of land animals 252 million years ago. Before the extinction, ancient seafloors were dominated for about 280 million years by brachiopods. After the catastrophe, those once dominant groups were nearly eliminated. Only about half of mollusks, including clams and snails, disappeared. The survivors, along with fish and echinoderms, went on to dominate Earth's oceans.
Ephraim Heller's photos are from his recent trip to Namibia. Today's post features the Skeleton Coast, 500 km along the Atlantic, where the cold, nutrient-rich waters of the Benguela Current collide with the Namib Desert. Cape fur seals are the most breeding colonies on the coast, with breeding colonies reaching more than 100,000–200,000.
It's Sunday. C&C's author is blogging and packing, since he's leaving for the airport soon. He's headed for Fulton County on lawyer business, not election business. C & C's author will keep the blog going. for loyal supporters.
This spring, the Charles River in Massachusetts was full of river herring. River herring once migrated up coastal rivers by the hundreds of millions. The first of scores of dams on the Charles was built in Watertown in 1634 for a grist mill. With human sewage and animal sewage from butchers, the river became Greater Boston’s toilet. The federally-enforced cleanup of the Charles of the last three decades is a testament to what can happen when we stop treating a river as a toilet.
The week was marked by a deep reflection on the structural realities of Mexico and the World Cup. Writers analyzed how the enthusiasm and collective effervescence for sport revealed a latent capacity for unity and community belonging in the country. They also analyze violence, impunity, the water crisis, independent journalism and gender equality.
During hospital stay, Jon started a list called "Things I Keep Wanting and Not Doing" in his journal. He wanted to get peacocks for his birthday, but leukemia has changed his treatment plans and he will start two new chemotherapy drugs tomorrow. He had grand summer plans, including a month-long painting residency in Europe, an apprenticeship with someone he admire, and time spent resting.
Permian-Triassic extinction event, called the Great Dying, wiped out about 96% of marine species and 70% of land animals 252 million years ago. Before the extinction, ancient seafloors were dominated for about 280 million years by brachiopods. After the catastrophe, those once dominant groups were nearly eliminated. Only about half of mollusks, including clams and snails, disappeared. The survivors, along with fish and echinoderms, went on to dominate Earth's oceans.
Ephraim Heller's photos are from his recent trip to Namibia. Today's post features the Skeleton Coast, 500 km along the Atlantic, where the cold, nutrient-rich waters of the Benguela Current collide with the Namib Desert. Cape fur seals are the most breeding colonies on the coast, with breeding colonies reaching more than 100,000–200,000.
It's Sunday. C&C's author is blogging and packing, since he's leaving for the airport soon. He's headed for Fulton County on lawyer business, not election business. C & C's author will keep the blog going. for loyal supporters.
This spring, the Charles River in Massachusetts was full of river herring. River herring once migrated up coastal rivers by the hundreds of millions. The first of scores of dams on the Charles was built in Watertown in 1634 for a grist mill. With human sewage and animal sewage from butchers, the river became Greater Boston’s toilet. The federally-enforced cleanup of the Charles of the last three decades is a testament to what can happen when we stop treating a river as a toilet.
The week was marked by a deep reflection on the structural realities of Mexico and the World Cup. Writers analyzed how the enthusiasm and collective effervescence for sport revealed a latent capacity for unity and community belonging in the country. They also analyze violence, impunity, the water crisis, independent journalism and gender equality.
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