Resources
Environmental Science
See table of contents โถ
Climate Change
Nuclear Meltdowns Raised Fears, but Growing Energy Needs May Outweigh Them
Catastrophic accidents at power plants like Three Mile Island and Fukushima Daiichi have heightened fears about the safety of nuclear energy, but environmentalists and others are giving it renewed attention as a way to fight global warming.
Our Appetite for Beef Is Growing. So Are Climate Worries.
Scientists warn that to slow climate change, we need to change how we farm and what we eat.
Could We Geo-engineer Ourselves Out of Climate Change?
Is geo-engineering the climate an answer to global warming? Cold War science has some lessons.
Infrastructure
Future of Home
Guatemalan homesteaders and a Michigan contractor are riding a wave that could change how our lives are wired.
Power Line Fears
News media coverage in the 1980s and early 1990s fueled fears of a national cancer epidemic caused by power lines and generated a debate that still lingers today.
Natural Disasters
Interactive Map: Notable Natural Disasters Around the World
This interactive map explores notable natural disasters that have occurred aroundย the world. Students can use this map to learn more about the causes, effects and long-term impact of each disaster. Four Retro Report short documentaries are linked on the map. It can be used in Science classes in conjunction with the lesson plan, Exploring Natural […]
Blazes That Damaged Yellowstone Changed Wildfire Strategy
A rapidly growing California wildfire is threatening a grove of giant Sequoia trees in Yosemite National Park, some nearly 3,000 years old. For context, we examine the 1988 fires in Yellowstone National Park that ignited a debate over firefighting tactics and sustainable forestry.
Earthquake Readiness: How the San Franciso 1989 Quake Shook Awareness
The 1989 earthquake that shook San Francisco sent out a wake up call that continues to echo across the country.
Hurricane Katrina’s Aftermath and Lessons in Dealing with Disaster
Hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf Coast in 2005, and Louisianaโs troubled housing recovery has shaped the response to every major disaster since, including Hurricane Sandy.
Natural Resources
Unprepared: Lessons From Two Massive Oil Spills
A disastrous oil spill off the coast of Alaska and massive explosion of a rig in the Gulf of Mexico revealed a pattern of unsettled standards and inconsistent oversight that cast doubt on the oil industryโs preparedness for future accidents.
Weโre Catching More Diseases From Wild Animals, and Itโs Our Fault.
Scientists who venture into rainforests and bat caves explain how viruses, like Covid-19, spill over from animals to people, and what we must do to stop the next pandemic.
Population Bomb: The Overpopulation Theory That Fell Flat
In the 1960s, fears of overpopulation sparked talk of population control. So what happened?
This Snake Is Eating the Everglades
Burmese pythons released into the wild by well-meaning pet owners have created a reptilian nightmare in the Everglades.
Isolated Tribes
Today, there are approximately 100 tribes in the Amazon rainforest that have not interacted with the modern world. A hundred years ago, there were many more. Co-produced with PBS, American Experience, we look at the delicate situation these tribes find themselves in.
Atomic Vets
The story of the veterans who witnessed secret atomic testing and how their decades-long struggle for recognition affects soldiers today. This story is a coproduction with Reveal, from The Center for Investigative Reporting.
Agent Orange: Last Chapter of the Vietnam War
The use of the defoliant Agent Orange during the Vietnam War continues to cast a dark shadow over both American veterans and Vietnamese citizens.
Space and Exploration
Biosphere 2: A Faulty Mars Survival Test Gets a Second Act
NASA isnโt the first organization to experiment with living on Mars โ in 1991 eight people sealed themselves inside a giant glass biosphere to practice space living. By the time they emerged two years later, they had โsuffocated, starved and went mad.โ
The Moonโs Lasting Pull
Our moon has winked from the heavens as a symbol and anchor, reminding us not only the cycle of life, but also of danger and death. Scientists have brought the moon into sharper focus, and astronauts have left the first footprints there. But will we ever be able to explain its lasting, mesmerizing power of attraction?
Space Law: The Next Generation
An international treaty laid out the basics of space law in 1967. But without a lot of case history to go on, lawyers today have looked to maritime law and Arctic exploration as they lay the groundwork for how space will be governed.
Sustainability and Conservation
Beekeepers and Scientists Join Forces to Protect the Pollinators
Honeybees, heroes in the national food supply, are under threat from parasites, exhaustion and a mysterious ailment. Hereโs how beekeepers and scientists are fighting back to save the hives.
Amazon Rainforest Defenders Confront Violence, Encroachment and Politics
Debates over development in the worldโs largest rainforest have led to deadly conflicts, threats to its indigenous people and harm to the global atmosphere.
Meatless Burgers Are on Trend. Eating to Save the World Has a Long History.
Plant-based meats may be high tech, but the ideas behind them have been around for decades.
A Barge Full of Garbage Helped to Fuel a Recycling Movement
In the 1980s, rising public awareness about waste was fueled by a bizarre news story about a meandering New York City garbage barge.
Future of Food
A small South Dakota farm holds lessons for feeding a crowded and less predictable world.
Reintroducing Wolves to Yellowstone was a Success. That’s When Trouble โBegan.
In the 1990s, the federal government reintroduced the gray wolf to Yellowstone National Park. It was considered a big success. And thatโs when the real fight began.
GMO Food Fears and the First Test Tube Tomato
In the 1990s, a bunch of gene jockeys brought the first genetically engineered food to market. The business crashed but biotech science has flourished far beyond the produce aisle.
Freeing Willy
In the wake of the 1993 hit movie Free Willy, activists and fans campaigned to release the movieโs star โ a captive killer whale named Keiko โ and launched a story Hollywood couldnโt invent.
Human Impact on the Environment
Toxic Waste in the Neighborhood: The Love Canal Disaster
In 1978, toxic chemicals leaking from an old landfill thrust an upstate New York community called โLove Canalโ into the national headlines, and made it synonymous with โenvironmental disaster.โ
Fire Safety and Chemicals in Our Clothing
There are over 80,000 chemicals in use today. The story of Tris, a fire retardant that was once used to treat childrenโs pajamas, but was banned as a carcinogen in the 1970s, illustrates the challenge of regulating chemicals.
Rachel Carsonโs Warning on D.D.T. Ignited an Environmental Movement
Author Rachel Carsonโs strike against the pesticide DDT turned her into both an environmental hero and a foil for those who believe regulation has gone too far. That fight is more relevant than ever.
Princess Diana Brought Attention to Land Mines, but Their Danger Lingers
In the late 1990s, Princess Diana brought public attention to land mine victims. But since her death, how much progress has been made in the worldwide fight against leftover munitions?
The Fly That Quarantined California and Pitted Environmentalists Against Farmers
In the summer of 1981, the Mediterranean fruit fly spread through Californiaโs Santa Clara Valley, infesting backyard fruit trees and threatening the stateโs $14 billion agricultural industry.
Water and Oceans
Fighting Drought With an Ancient Practice: Harvesting the Rain
Ancient methods of collecting and storing rainwater are being used to address severe drought today.
Future of Water
The increasing scarcity of drinking water is beginning to capture the worldโs attention โ but surprisingly, an innovative solution might just be found in one of the Earthโs driest places.
