- Together, We Have the Power to Protect the Ocean
- World's Most Polluted Seas Revealed
- The Ocean Cleanup—A project to remove plastic pollution.
- The end of fish—"The ones we like to eat are rapidly vanishing from the ocean." WaPo
- US coastguard releases Chinese boat accused of illegal fishing in North Pacific—"Vessel caught with half a tonne of salmon and high-seas net widely condemned as highly destructive to marine life."
- Between the Lines: It's not censorship by ignoring those denying climate change—"Does denying a seat at the journalistic table to climate change deniers amount to censorship and political correctness, in the sense that unpopular opinions are being silenced? As I am wont to tell
- Obama Says He 'Absolutely' Wants To Go Off On Climate Deniers In Congress some letter writers, you are entitled to your opinions, but not your facts."
- 7 reasons America will fail on climate change
- Seas Rise, Florida GOP Leaders Balk At Climate Change
- Billionaire seeks to help climate-change victims
- John Podesta Says White House Is Ready To Spar Over Power Plant Rules
- Climate change helps seas disturb Japanese war dead—"Rising sea levels have disturbed the skeletons of soldiers killed on the Marshall Islands during World War Two."
- Jindal Signs Bill Blocking Lawsuits Against Oil and Gas Companies—"The Louisiana governor might have also effectively undercut ongoing claims against BP for the 2010 Gulf oil spill."
- Safety Gaps In Chemical Storage—"Millions of pounds of chemicals and oil are stored and shipped along the river and we've found there are gaps in laws meant to keep you safe."
- States balk at keeping oil-train info from public—"U.S. railroads forced to turn over details of their volatile crude oil shipments are asking states to sign agreements not to disclose the information. But some states are refusing, saying Thursday that the information shouldn't be kept from the public."
- Alaska Village Sues Feds to Open Road in Refuge
- How A 'Bunch Of Commies' Are Forcing The Fortune 500 To Stop Destroying Rain Forests, Overfishing, And Burning Fossil Fuels
- Dinosaur discovery: "Pinocchio Rex," the weird cousin of the T-Rex—"Qianzhousaurus -- who was smaller and more agile than T-Rex -- walked the earth 66 million years ago." Salon
- These Bones Might Be the Biggest Creature That Ever Walked the Earth
- Early Life in Death Valley—"Evidence from Southwestern deserts suggests that oxygen-breathing organisms arose on land rather than in the seas."
- Direct evidence of cooling after the dinosaur-killing asteroid impact
- Dinosaur smuggler sentenced to three months in prison in New York—"Eric Prokopi, the 'one-man black market in fossils', given lenient sentence on felony counts for his cooperation with attorneys."
- 8 Surprising Historical Facts That Will Change Your Concept Of Time Forever
- On Ice: 100-year-old negatives discovered in Antarctic
- Ancient Egyptians transported pyramid stones over wet sand
- Girl's skeleton found in cave sheds light on origins of first Americans—"DNA recovered from 12,000-year-old skeleton help to dispel claims that first Americans came from Australia, Asia or Europe."
- Ancient hunting camp found beneath Lake Huron
- Over 1,000 Mayan Codices Discovered in Yucatan Ruins
- Siberian fisherman accidentally nets 4,000-year-old pagan god—"Nikolay Tarasov was about to throw the tiny figure back into the river, when he decided to take it to a local museum on a hunch. Experts say the pagan god was carved in the Bronze Age by the Okunev or Samus cultures of ancient Tisul."
- Found after 500 years, the wreck of Christopher Columbus's flagship the Santa Maria
- Dunragit road works unearth ancient treasure trove
- Aboriginal art, 60,000 years old, vandalized in Australia—"The art is in the Burrup Peninsula of Western Australia, a national park containing examples of ancient carved rock."
- Vandals desecrate ancient standing stone at Hill of Tara in Co Meath
- Vandals destroy prehistoric rock art in Libya's lawless Sahara
- ISIS Destroys 3000 Year-old Assyrian Artifacts in Syria
- Ballymaglaff Stone Age site 'lost because of planning error'
- Illegal projects damage Effigy Mounds—"National Park Service officials approved $3 million in illegal construction projects over a decade that damaged one of the nation’s most sacred American Indian burial sites, but few have been punished for the bureaucratic failure, records show."
- Treasure hunters destroy tomb