environmentScienceThe (Very Slow) Race to Move Forests in Time to Save ThemBy Lauren MarkhamScienceFeeling Climate Dread? You’re Not AloneBy Matt SimonScienceIn New Zealand, People (and Moths) Rediscover Dark SkiesBy Petrina DarrahIdeasHow ‘Big Funeral’ Made the Afterlife So ExpensiveBy Eleanor CumminsScienceHow Healthy Is Farm Soil? Check How Active Its Microbes AreBy Jennifer Clare BallBusinessDrones May Help Replant Forests—If Enough Seeds Take RootBy Khari JohnsonIdeasEnvironmental Law Is Getting in the Way of Climate ActionBy Eleanor CumminsScienceThe practical ways to reduce your carbon footprint (that actually work)By Laurie Clarke and Grace BrowneScienceUrchin Slayers Are Trying to Save the Underwater RainforestBy Sierra GarciaScienceAn Outdated Grid Has Created a Solar Power Economic DivideBy Eric NiilerScienceA Third of Shark and Ray Species May Face ExtinctionBy Karen McVeighScienceRadioactive Rat Snakes Could Help Monitor Fukushima FalloutBy Susan D'AgostinoScienceA Plan to Slow the Creep of the Sahara—by Planting GardensBy Jessica Leigh HesterScienceWildfires Used to Be Helpful. How Did They Get So Hellish?By Matt SimonScienceIs the Robot-Filled Future of Farming a Nightmare or Utopia?By Katrina MillerScienceWant to Slash Carbon Emissions? Start With These Power PlantsBy John Timmer, Ars TechnicaScienceEastern Hemlocks Face Extinction. A Tiny Fly Could Save ThemBy Zoya TeirsteinCultureSimCity wasn’t built for the climate crisis. These games areBy Edwin Evans-ThirlwellScienceIf You Want to Tackle Climate Change, Start With MethaneBy Matt SimonScienceThe UN Climate Report: All Is Not Well—but All Is Not LostBy Matt SimonScienceCan You Recycle a Hard Drive? Google Is Trying to Find OutBy Maddie StoneScienceSunny-Day Flooding Is About to Become More Than a NuisanceBy Jim MorrisonScienceThe Cost of Preventing Deaths by Climate-Driven HeatBy Eric NiilerScienceOh Good, Now There's an Outbreak of Wildfire ThundercloudsBy Matt SimonMore Stories