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Living in a U.S. coastal county bordered by ocean waters with very high concentrations of microplastics may increase the risk of heart and metabolic diseases, such as type 2 diabetes, coronary artery ...
The ocean is a source of life and resilience—for people and cultures, for livelihoods, for climate stability. But it's under ...
Indirect costs are fat targets for budget slashers, but beware: They make science possible. They don’t pay for the chromatograph I use in my experiments, but they do pay for the electricity to run it.
A new ecological study links high marine microplastic levels near US coastlines with significantly greater prevalence of type ...
Living near microplastic-polluted waters may raise risks of diabetes, stroke, and heart disease, a study reveals. Learn about the health impacts and ways to reduce exposure.
Living near microplastic-polluted waters may raise risks of diabetes, stroke, and heart disease, a study reveals. Learn about the health impacts and ways to reduce exposure.
Living near microplastic-polluted waters may raise risks of diabetes, stroke, and heart disease, a study reveals. Learn about the health impacts and ways to reduce exposure.
Living near microplastic-polluted waters may raise risks of diabetes, stroke, and heart disease, a study reveals. Learn about the health impacts and ways to reduce exposure.
Living near microplastic-polluted waters may raise risks of diabetes, stroke, and heart disease, a study reveals. Learn about the health impacts and ways to reduce exposure.
Compared with people who lived near waters with low levels of pollution — defined as seeing maybe "one tiny plastic speck in 200 bathtubs of ocean water" — people who lived near highly ...
The oceans could become so filled with carbon dioxide that scientists are proposing a new factor to measure their capacity ...
Swimming in the ocean is not just great exercise; it also provides a connection to nature proponents say is especially effective at reducing stress.