
Wooden remains of two Roman wells – one of which had collapsed before it could even be used – have revealed “a failure of Roman engineering on an industrial scale”
Written by BBC

Wooden remains of two Roman wells – one of which had collapsed before it could even be used – have revealed “a failure of Roman engineering on an industrial scale”
Written by Michael Darby

Please support and share everywhere this crowdfunding campaign for legal expenses in actions vitally important for all Australians, with potentially world-wide beneficial consequences
Written by Suzanne Burdick, Ph.D.

German researchers found children ages 5-11 who received two doses of Pfizer’s Covid ‘vaccine’ had heightened levels of a type of antibody suggestive of an altered immune system response one year after vaccination, a new peer-reviewed study revealed
Written by Jeff Willis

Recently some enlightened congressmen, senators, and members of the “donor class” took decisive action. Their goal: “To awaken slumbering Americans to the dangers of climate change.”
Written by Dr. Matthew Wielicki

The Yale E360 article titled “As Drylands Greening, Rising Carbon Dioxide Levels Are Fueling a Climate Conundrum” offers a clear example of the shifting narratives that have characterized environmental discourse over recent decades
Written by Dr Peter McCullough MD, MPH

When the Springer Nature CUREUS Journal of Biomedical Sciences retracted one of the most comprehensive and valid risk-benefit analyses of the COVID-19 vaccines, they probably had no idea the message would be greatly amplified and now fully published in a pair of papers in the International Journal of Vaccine Theory, Practice, and Research
Written by Hannes Sarv

Jessica Weinkle, Associate Professor at the University of North Carolina, Wilmington, says the rationale of the media coverage on ‘climate change’ and its consequences often leaves much to be desired
Written by Chris Morrison

Heavier and longer summer monsoon rains are said to be fuelling a rise in child marriages in Pakistan, reports Agence France-Presse
Written by Sarah Kuta

While Ellard Hunting and fellow researchers were out studying the weather at a field station in England, they noticed something unexpected on one of their instruments
Written by Brian Maffly

For the decades since their discovery, seismic signals known as PKP precursors have challenged scientists. Regions of Earth’s lower mantle scatter incoming seismic waves, which return to the surface as PKP waves at differing speeds
Written by Norman Fenton

It’s been three weeks since the judge (Justice Farbey) in Mark Steyn’s case ruled against him, upholding Ofcom rulings against him for comments made in two of his GBNews shows back in 2022
Written by BBC

The Garvellach islands off the west coast of Scotland are the best record of Earth entering its biggest ever ice age around 720 million years ago, researchers have discovered
Written by Breitbart

Climate activists staged protests at several German airports last Thursday, forcing a temporary halt to flights at some of them in the latest in a string of similar demonstrations
Written by Trisha Leigh

If you check out images of Antarctica today, it might seem like one long flat sheet of ice (except for the mountains and cliffs, of course). Underneath, though, it’s a whole different story
Written by Rudi Molinek

Since appearing on Manhattan in 2011, the species has become one of the island’s most dominant ants, and scientists formally identified it this year
Written by Kristina Kilgrove

A “stunning” tomb found on an isolated moor in southwest England could help archaeologists understand what life was like 4,000 years ago in the Bronze Age