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The Conversation

Laundry is a top source of microplastic pollution – here's how to clean your clothes more sustainably

  • Written by Judith Weis, Professor Emerita of Biological Sciences, Rutgers University - Newark
imageLaundry washwater is a major source of microplastic fibers that can end up in water and soil.Venca-Stastny/iStock via Getty Images

Microplastics are turning up everywhere, from remote mountain tops to deep ocean trenches. They also are in many animals, including humans.

The most common microplastics in the environment are microfibers –...

Read more: Laundry is a top source of microplastic pollution – here's how to clean your clothes more...

Biden, like Trump, sidesteps Congress to get things done

  • Written by Jordan Cash, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Michigan State University
imageFormer President Donald Trump and President Joe Biden.Jim Watson,Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

With two presidents – one current and one former – running against each other for the first time since 1912, the 2024 election presents voters with the unique opportunity to compare how Democrat Joe Biden and Republican Donald Trump, who are e...

Read more: Biden, like Trump, sidesteps Congress to get things done

I wrote a play for children about integrating the arts into STEM fields − here's what I learned about encouraging creative, interdisciplinary thinking

  • Written by Rob Roznowski, Professor of Acting, Michigan State University
imageScenes from 'The STEAM Plays,' performed in Michigan schools. Thalia Lara

Often, science and art are described as starkly different things. That narrative can start early on, with kids encouraged to pursue a STEM – short for science, technology, engineering and math – education that may or may not include an arts education.

As a professo...

Read more: I wrote a play for children about integrating the arts into STEM fields − here's what I learned...

Gen Z and millennials have an unlikely love affair with their local libraries

  • Written by Kathi Inman Berens, Associate Professor of Book Publishing and Digital Humanities, Portland State University
imageLibraries can be an oasis from doomscrolling and information overload.Diliff/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SAimageCC BY-ND

A phone fixation may seem at odds with an attraction to books. But the latter may offer a much-needed reprieve from the former.

In our recent study of American Gen Z and millennials, we discovered that 92% of them check social media...

Read more: Gen Z and millennials have an unlikely love affair with their local libraries

Not all carbon-capture projects pay off for the climate – we mapped the pros and cons of each and found clear winners and losers

  • Written by Volker Sick, Professor of Advanced Energy Research, Director of the Global CO2 Initiative, University of Michigan
imageProducing concrete blocks with captured carbon, like these in Brooklyn, NY., has both economic and climate benefits.AP Photo/John Minchillo

Capturing carbon dioxide from the air or industries and recycling it can sound like a win-win climate solution. The greenhouse gas stays out of the atmosphere where it can warm the planet, and it avoids the use...

Read more: Not all carbon-capture projects pay off for the climate – we mapped the pros and cons of each and...

When can we stop worrying about rising prices? The latest inflation report offers no easy answers

  • Written by D. Brian Blank, Associate Professor of Finance, Mississippi State University

Tired of thinking about inflation’s impact on your wallet? You’re not alone. But like it or not, higher prices continue to be an economic and – with the presidential race – a political issue as we enter the early months of 2024.

The Conversation asked two financial economists, D. Brian Blank at Mississippi State University...

Read more: When can we stop worrying about rising prices? The latest inflation report offers no easy answers

Church without God: How secular congregations fill a need for some nonreligious Americans

  • Written by Jacqui Frost, Assistant Professor of Sociology, Purdue University
imageSunday Assembly is one of the larger secular congregations aiming to provide community and ritual for nonreligious people. AP Photo/Jae C. Hong

Shared testimonies, collective singing, silent meditation and baptism rituals – these are all activities you might find at a Christian church service on a Sunday morning in the United States. But what...

Read more: Church without God: How secular congregations fill a need for some nonreligious Americans

Blizzards are inescapable − but the most expensive winter storm damage is largely preventable

  • Written by Michel Bruneau, Professor of Engineering, University at Buffalo
imageWrecks during snowstorms can shut down highways, stranding drivers in the cold for hours.Ben Hasty/MediaNews Group/Reading Eagle via Getty Images

Winter storms can easily become billion-dollar disasters as the snow piles up on interstates and collapses roofs and power lines. Yet, while canceled flights and business interruptions can’t be...

Read more: Blizzards are inescapable − but the most expensive winter storm damage is largely preventable

Tahoe avalanche: What causes seemingly safe snow slopes to collapse? A physicist and avid skier explains

  • Written by Nathalie Vriend, Associate Professor of Thermo Fluid Sciences, University of Colorado Boulder
imageA skier at Palisades Tahoe, home of the 1960 Winter Olympics and site of a small but deadly avalanche in 2024.AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli

An avalanche swept up skiers at Lake Tahoe’s largest ski resort on Jan. 10, 2024, as a 150-foot-wide sheet of snow slid down a mountain slope into a pile 10 feet deep. One person died in the avalanche and...

Read more: Tahoe avalanche: What causes seemingly safe snow slopes to collapse? A physicist and avid skier...

Tahoe avalanches: What causes innocent-looking snow slopes to collapse? A physicist and skier explains, with tips for surviving

  • Written by Nathalie Vriend, Associate Professor of Thermo Fluid Sciences, University of Colorado Boulder
imageA skier at Palisades Tahoe, home of the 1960 Winter Olympics and site of a small but deadly avalanche in 2024.AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli

An avalanche swept up skiers at Lake Tahoe’s largest ski resort on Jan. 10, 2024, as a 150-foot-wide sheet of snow slid down a mountain slope into a pile 10 feet deep. One person died in the avalanche and...

Read more: Tahoe avalanches: What causes innocent-looking snow slopes to collapse? A physicist and skier...

More Articles ...

  1. In the 'big tent' of free speech, can you be too open-minded?
  2. Iran terror blast highlights success – and growing risk – of ISIS-K regional strategy
  3. 7 strategies to help gifted autistic students succeed in college
  4. To protect endangered sharks and rays, scientists are mapping these species' most important locations
  5. Sellout! How political corruption shaped an American insult
  6. Otters, beavers and other semiaquatic mammals keep clean underwater, thanks to their flexible fur
  7. Martin Luther King Jr.'s moral stance against the Vietnam War offers lessons on how to fight for peace in the Middle East
  8. How we almost ended up with a bull's-eye bar code
  9. A Supreme Court ruling on fishing for herring could sharply curb federal regulatory power
  10. Republicans are pushing for drastic asylum changes – an immigration law scholar breaks down the proposal
  11. As Zepbound dominates headlines as a new obesity-fighting drug, a nutritionist warns that weight loss shouldn’t be the only goal
  12. Pope Francis called surrogacy 'deplorable' – but the reasons why women and parents choose surrogacy are complex and defy simple labels
  13. 'Thirst trap' and 'edgelord' were recently added to the dictionary – so why hasn't 'nibling' made the cut?
  14. From besting Tetris AI to epic speedruns – inside gaming’s most thrilling feats
  15. After an 80-year absence, gray wolves have returned to Colorado − here's how the reintroduction of this apex predator will affect prey and plants
  16. Cannabis products may harbor fungal toxins harmful to human health, but regulations are uneven or nonexistent
  17. Earth isn't the only planet with seasons, but they can look wildly different on other worlds
  18. A beginner's guide to sound baths − what they are, how to choose a good one and what the research shows
  19. Why don't fruit bats get diabetes? New understanding of how they've adapted to a high-sugar diet could lead to treatments for people
  20. 2023's billion-dollar disasters list shattered the US record with 28 big weather and climate disasters amid Earth's hottest year on record
  21. Why both Israel and Hezbollah are eager to avoid tit-for-tat attacks escalating into full-blown war
  22. Taiwanese election may determine whether Beijing opts to force the issue of reunification
  23. Plagiarism is not always easy to define or detect
  24. LGBTQ+ workers want more than just pride flags in June
  25. Take laughter, add tears − the secret recipe for the most-liked Super Bowl ads
  26. Voters don't always have final say -- state legislatures and governors are increasingly undermining ballot measures that win
  27. I set out to investigate where silky sharks travel − and by chance documented a shark's amazing power to regenerate its sabotaged fin
  28. What Taoism teaches about the body and being healthy
  29. Rabies is an ancient, unpredictable and potentially fatal disease − two rabies researchers explain how to protect yourself
  30. Trump’s arguments for immunity not as hopeless as some claim
  31. What happens to the ocean if we take out all the fish? A marine ecologist explains the complex roles fish play in their ecosystem
  32. From South Asia to Mexico, from slave to spiritual icon, this woman's life is a snapshot of Spain's colonization – and the Pacific slave trade history that books often leave out
  33. South Korea's gender imbalance is bad news for men − outnumbering women, many face bleak marriage prospects
  34. An overlooked and undercounted group of Arab American and Muslim voters may have outsized impact on 2024 presidential election
  35. Emergency medicine residencies more likely to go unfilled at for-profit and newly accredited programs
  36. College applications rose in states that legalized recreational marijuana
  37. US Supreme Court decision on Trump-Colorado ballot case 'monumental' for democracy itself, not just 2024 presidential election
  38. Jan. 6 was an example of networked incitement − a media and disinformation expert explains the danger of political violence orchestrated over social media
  39. 70 years after Brown vs. Board of Education, public schools still deeply segregated
  40. The US invented shopping malls, but China is writing their next chapter
  41. What is resilience? A psychologist explains the main ingredients that help people manage stress
  42. Literature inspired my medical career: Why the humanities are needed in health care
  43. Why does Claudine Gay still work at Harvard after being forced to resign as its president? She's got tenure
  44. 'Designated contrarians' could improve nonprofit boards by disrupting the kind of consensus and groupthink that contributed to the NRA's woes
  45. With higher fees and more ads, streaming services like Netflix, Disney+ and Hulu are cashing in by using the old tactics of cable TV
  46. Trump's Iowa political organizing this year is nothing like his scattershot 2016 campaign
  47. 2 colonists had similar identities – but one felt compelled to remain loyal, the other to rebel
  48. How the Iowa caucuses became the first major challenge of US presidential campaigns
  49. The chickadee in the snowbank: A 'canary in the coal mine' for climate change in the Sierra Nevada mountains
  50. Pundits: Central to democracy, or partisan spewers of opinion who destroy trust