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Wudan Yan
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A Massive Volcanic Catastrophe Could Hit the Pacific Northwest. Experts Are Sounding the Alarm
A Massive Volcanic Catastrophe Could Hit the Pacific Northwest. Experts Are Sounding the Alarm

Dangerous mudflows, known as lahars, could inundate the communities surrounding Mt. Rainier in as little as 30 minutes | Popular Mechanics

In North Carolina, a radical experiment targets social determinants of health with fresh produce and safe housing
In North Carolina, a radical experiment targets social determinants of health with fresh produce and safe housing

A pilot program in North Carolina show what’s possible when we address the social determinants of health | STAT News

The Vice of Spice: Confronting Lead-Tainted Turmeric
The Vice of Spice: Confronting Lead-Tainted Turmeric

Traders in Bangladesh used lead chromate to enhance the spice’s appearance. Then scientists and policymakers stepped in. | Undark

The unrelenting roar of a crypto mine tore this town apart
The unrelenting roar of a crypto mine tore this town apart

Cryptocurrency aims to revolutionize finance, but its mines are destroying communities across America. (Photo credit: Juan Diego Reyes) | Popular Mechanics

The science of solo time in the wilderness
The science of solo time in the wilderness

I unpack the latest findings on solitude and the outdoors | Sierra Magazine

Sea Potential works to empower people of color in marine sciences
Sea Potential works to empower people of color in marine sciences

A Q&A with the co-founders of an environmental nonprofit dedicated to getting BIPOC youth involved in marine sciences. | High Country News.

Researchers see ‘future of an entire species’ in ultrasound technique
Researchers see ‘future of an entire species’ in ultrasound technique

To bring abalone back from the edge of extinction, scientists need to find improved ways of coaxing the snails into reproducing. | New York Times

Journalism isn’t who you are. It’s what you do.
Journalism isn’t who you are. It’s what you do.

Making journalism part of our identities justifies the passion and purpose that brought us to the profession. It also makes us supremely exploitable. | Poynter

 Juul hooked an entire generation on nicotine – can it redeem its image?
Juul hooked an entire generation on nicotine – can it redeem its image?

The company has been shamed by health regulators, lost revenue and is the center of hundreds of US lawsuits. Now it has thrown in a last-ditch effort to continue sales | The Guardian

Why it's so hard to make tech more diverse
Why it's so hard to make tech more diverse

An entrepreneur shares what happened when she set out to try and solve some of the problems she experienced firsthand in the tech industry. | MIT Technology Review [PDF]

What can and can’t be learned from a doctor in China who pioneered masks
What can and can’t be learned from a doctor in China who pioneered masks

Dr. Wu Lien-Teh helped change the course of a plague epidemic in the early 20th century and promoted the use of masks as a public health tool. | The New York Times

What it cost to survive
What it cost to survive

How Covid changed five people’s lives | New York

The pandemic is undoing field researchers' oldest assumption
The pandemic is undoing field researchers' oldest assumption

With the right partners, scientists don’t have to visit their study sites to get good data | The Atlantic

I jumped the queue to get an expiring vaccine. Did I do the right thing?
I jumped the queue to get an expiring vaccine. Did I do the right thing?

A freezer containing Covid-19 vaccines failed in the middle of the night. I explored the ethics of getting a rapidly expiring vaccine. | MIT Tech Review

The Nobel Prize-Winning, LSD Dropping, Yet Problematic Scientist Who Invented PCR
The Nobel Prize-Winning, LSD Dropping, Yet Problematic Scientist Who Invented PCR

I wrote a profile of Kary Mullis, inventor of PCR. | Elemental

The Legacy
The Legacy

Uranium mining has been banned in Navajo country—could it come back? | SIERRA Magazine

Waste Away
Waste Away

Finding homes for the waste that will (probably) outlive humanity | MIT Tech Review (links to PDF)

Face-mask recognition has arrived -- for better or worse.
Face-mask recognition has arrived -- for better or worse.

New algorithms can police whether people are complying with public health guidance. The practice raises familiar questions about data privacy. | National Geographic

What should the U.S. learn from South Korea's Covid-19 success?
What should the U.S. learn from South Korea's Covid-19 success?

South Korea’s response to Covid-19 has been widely praised. Will Americans ever be willing to adopt a similar approach? | Undark

Yes, you might be becoming a bit of a jerk
Yes, you might be becoming a bit of a jerk

Science explains why there’s a loss of human compassion during pandemics | Elemental

Health professionals say police are targeting them at protests
Health professionals say police are targeting them at protests

In cities across the U.S. — from Seattle to Austin, Asheville, and Denver — medics say they are dealing with police altercations while trying to render aid | Elemental

Fallout: First cancer, now delayed compensation for Indigenous downwinder communities
Fallout: First cancer, now delayed compensation for Indigenous downwinder communities

Bureaucratic roadblocks mean ‘apology’ payouts are hard to access for Indigenous communities exposed to nuclear tests. | High Country News

Pollution evolution: The little fish that could
Pollution evolution: The little fish that could

Where other species succumbed, the killifish survived contaminated habitats. It’s a finding that could help researchers understand environmental risk factors for humans. | Knowable Magazine

Coronavirus tests sciences' need for speed limits.
Coronavirus tests sciences' need for speed limits.

Thanks to coronavirus, more folks care about scientific research. Preprint servers & publishers are seeing a surge in readership, with many new readers not well versed in the limitations of the latest research findings. | The New York Times

Superfund, meet super plants.
Superfund, meet super plants.

Can the plant microbiome help clean up contaminated land? | The New York Times

Meet the new drive through: a coronavirus clinic serving up swabs.
Meet the new drive through: a coronavirus clinic serving up swabs.

In Seattle, the center of the US outbreak, one medical center has begun screening workers for the new virus by setting up a mobile clinic in a parking lot where cars serve as isolated waiting rooms. | The New York Times.

Sick people across the U.S. say they are being denied the coronavirus test
Sick people across the U.S. say they are being denied the coronavirus test

I contributed reporting to The New York Times’ coverage of the shortage of coronavirus tests from Seattle, WA.

Anyone's son
Anyone's son

Cody Dalton Eyre, a 20-year-old Alaskan Native, was having a mental health crisis on Christmas Eve, 2017 when his mother called 911 for help. So why did police officers end up shooting and killing him? | Longreads

Something in the man's bed was making him sick
Something in the man's bed was making him sick

For The New York Times.

For many reporters covering climate, population remains the elephant in the room
For many reporters covering climate, population remains the elephant in the room

For Columbia Journalism Review.

 

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