It is my hope that with the collaborative efforts of a unified world, the dark tones of the fossil fuel reliance and heavy pollution will fade to become a distant echo of our past.
![Conducting the climate change orchestra](https://www.advancedsciencenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Orchestra-CO2-transparent-bkg.jpg)
It is my hope that with the collaborative efforts of a unified world, the dark tones of the fossil fuel reliance and heavy pollution will fade to become a distant echo of our past.
Scientists question whether technologies such as desalination will create solutions to climate change or just shift the problem.
Whilst large-scale volcanic activity has been responsible for huge temperature rises millions of years ago, human-made climate change is happening at a far faster rate.
Permafrost thaw is impacting the availability of North American water resources. To manage this precious resource, guidelines for using new investigative tools are needed.
Deliberate decline in carbon-intensive practices is currently taking shape as a new way to confront climate change.
What is the nature, psychological significance, and issue engagement influence of personal experience when it comes to climate change?
Long-term and global datasets of Paleolithic archaeologists are relevant for present climate action, and new interdisciplinary alliances are needed to exploit them.
How can scientists studying different key foundational species under threat learn from one another to address declines in ecosystems?
COVID-19, like climate change, is a complex social problem that will require social scientific knowledge to understand its full and lasting impact impact.
Researchers in China find innovative tool making from early humans at a time of climatic upheaval.