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For the first time, 30% of electricity produced worldwide was from clean energy sources as the number of solar and wind farms continued to grow fast.
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The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration released an updated analysis of American fisheries late last week via its annual "Status of the Stocks" report, which provides an assessment of the populations of the seafood species fishermen catch and customers buy.
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Producer Felix Poon steps out of his comfort zone and picks up a crossbow, to find out if one weekend in the Catskills can convert him into a dedicated hunter.
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A phenomenon called "thermonasty" causes rhododendron leaves to curl up when it’s really cold out. This adaptation allows these broad-leaved evergreens to thrive in the doubly-challenging conditions of damp soil and freezing temperatures.
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The study looks at how PFAS exposure changes the way children respond to vaccines. Researchers are hoping to find participants between ages 4 to 8, and 11 to 15.
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The rates were lower than Eversource’s at the time the three towns signed their contracts, but the utility company has since dropped its rate.
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At a public information session earlier this week, regulators explained the permitting process to residents for a proposed asphalt plant the city of Nashua rejected. State and city permits are separate.
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Like many winter traditions on lakes across the U.S., the Pond Hockey Classic is under threat from climate change. This year, the tournament was moved from Lake Winnipesaukee, where the ice wasn't thick enough, to the smaller Lake Waukewan.
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Despite a daily cleanup that leaves the post-parade landscape remarkably clean, uncaught beads dangle from tree limbs like Spanish moss and get ground into the mud under the feet of passers-by.
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Author Elizabeth Rush describes her time aboard an icebreaker on a scientific mission to Thwaites Glacier.
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There's a reason you may never have found a shed antler in the woods, despite New Hampshire's population of approximately 100,000 deer (not to mention a few thousand moose). A whole host of forest-dwellers recognize the value of nutrients provided by found antlers.
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Octopuses are seen as smart and solitary. A seafood company plans to farm them commercially. Octopus garden? Sure. Octopus farm? No way, say the animal's advocates.