
The green movement is a religion rife with corruption, bad science, and hysteria, and nuclear – not renewables – is the best solution to our energy needs.
Written by James Delingpole

The green movement is a religion rife with corruption, bad science, and hysteria, and nuclear – not renewables – is the best solution to our energy needs.
Written by www.greatamericaneclipse.com

On August 21, 2017, millions of people across the United States will see nature’s most wondrous spectacle — a total eclipse of the Sun. It is a scene of unimaginable beauty; the Moon completely blocks the Sun, daytime becomes a deep twilight, and the Sun’s corona shimmers in the darkened sky. This is your guide to understand, prepare for, and view this beautiful celestial event.
Written by Columbia University School of Engineering and Applied Science

A new study led by Michael P. Burke, assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Columbia Engineering, has identified the significance of a new class of chemical reactions involving three molecules that each participate in the breaking and forming of chemical bonds.
Written by Richard F. Cronin

A good indicator of climate change is the ridge of caribou poop stretching for several kilometers. Piles of caribou poop 2.5 meters tall. Poop everywhere. Reminds me of that joke about the poor monkey desperately trying to put the cork back in. See the article published in January 2003 by the Japan Times and LA Times.
Written by Kenneth Richard
Most Of Warming Trend Since the 1980s Is Naturally Driven, Not CO2-Driven
Written by University of Michigan

A University of Michigan dentistry professor drew upon his expertise in oral health in developing a new theory to help explain the deaths of the famed Franklin naval expedition crew, a mystery that has captivated historians for more than 150 years.
Written by University of Arkansas, Fayetteville

The universe is incomprehensibly vast, with billions of other planets circling billions of other stars. The potential for intelligent life to exist somewhere out there should be enormous. So, where is everybody?
Written by Australian National University

Research led by The Australian National University (ANU) has solved the mystery of how the first animals appeared on Earth, a pivotal moment for the planet without which humans would not exist.
Written by Dr Klaus L E Kaiser
With the current “War on Monuments” just getting underway, new and lucrative jobs will be coming up soon, for example, for good stone masons and foundry workers.
Written by Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center

Researchers at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center and Ohio State’s College of Engineering have developed a new technology, Tissue Nanotransfection (TNT), that can generate any cell type of interest for treatment within the patient’s own body.
Written by University of Texas at Arlington

Astrophysicists at the University of Texas at Arlington have predicted that an Earth-like planet may be lurking in a star system just 16 light years away.
Written by Tony Heller
NOAA doesn’t have any daily temperature data from Brazil prior to 1944, and very little prior to 1960. The average station record length is only 30 years, and they average less than ten readings per month. Almost all of their Brazilian data is incoherent garbage.
Written by PSI Staff

Skeptic scientist rips bed-wetting author of press article making false and alarmist claims about melting Arctic ice, rising sea levels and other climate ‘catastrophes.’
Written by University of Oxford

Scientists at the University of Oxford have developed a new method to 3D-print laboratory- grown cells to form living structures. The approach could revolutionise regenerative medicine, enabling the production of complex tissues and cartilage that would potentially support, repair or augment diseased and damaged areas of the body.
Written by Springer

Chimpanzees of all ages and all sexes can learn the simple circular relationship between the three different hand signals used in the well-known game rock-paper-scissors.
Written by Dr Duane Thresher

Believe it or … believe it, in my last article Google, Columbia, NASA, Germany Censor Real Climatologists’ Emails I may not have been conspiracy-minded enough. (Yeah, yeah, I hate conspiracy theories too, but sometimes they really do happen.)