An image: the workings of a municipal well pump facility, rows of machines looming inactive, gummed up with the white material clogging pistons and leaking glutinously from seams.
Another image: a logging site, cutters and trucks sitting abandoned among felled trees, all heavily draped with ropy pale webs.
Another: a surface mine, the pit floor invisible under white goop. An excavator stands in the background, sunk to the treads. A helmeted man lies mired near the pool’s edge, clearly exhausted, holding onto a rope stretching taut off screen.
Ann put down the tablet and looked at her visitor. “It’s getting worse, then,” she said.
“It’s overwhelming our ability to keep up,” the president agreed. “Worldwide. Always at sites of resource extraction. For a while it was just slowing things down, and the industries could clear it away and keep going. But it’s still spreading, still getting more intense. Some of these places have had their operations all but shut down; and if things keep going, within the next few years . . .” She shrugged in frustration.
Ann nodded gravely. She looked away from the younger woman, out her office window, not seeing the New Mexico landscape. “Any progress on tracing its origin?”
“No. It may have started in some isolated place, but with modern transportation and supply chains, it spread so quickly that it was everywhere before we knew it. I guess we can count ourselves lucky that it’s not infectious to humans, or this could have been the worst pandemic in history.”
“And how are we doing with resources now?”
The president looked grim.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der March 2017-Ausgabe von Muse Science Magazine for Kids.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent ? Anmelden
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der March 2017-Ausgabe von Muse Science Magazine for Kids.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
Who's Your Cousin?
The great apes are among the most popular animals in most zoos. Their actions, facial expressions, and family life remind us so much of ourselves. Have you ever wondered, though, how we might look to them?
Is it possible to die of boredom?
To figure out if we can die of boredom, we first have to understand what boredom is. For help, we called James Danckert, a psychologist who studies boredom at the University of Waterloo in Canada.
THE PROBLEM WITH PALM OIL
Palm oil is all around you. It’s in sugary snacks like cookies and candy bars. It’s in lipstick and shampoo and pet food.
SERGE WICH
Serge Wich’s favorite days at work are spent out in the forest, studying orangutans in Sumatra and Borneo or chimpanzees in Tanzania.
ELODIE FREYMANN
When you’re feeling sick, it probably doesn’t occur to you to try eating tree bark.
Guardians of the Forest
EARLY, MAKESHIFT WILDLIFE DRONES HELPED TO DETECT AND PROTECT ORANGUTANS.
APE ANTICS
The Whirling World of primate play
Dr. Ape Will See You Now
HUMANS AREN’T THE ONLY PRIMATES THAT USE MEDICATION.
THE LEFT OVERS
A lot has happened for modern humans to get to this point. We lost most of our hair, learned how to make tools, established civilizations, sent a person to the Moon, and invented artificial intelligence. Whew! With all of these changes, our bodies have changed, too. It’s only taken us about six million years.
SO, WHAT IS A PRIMATE?
What do you have in common with the aye-aye, sifaka, siamang, and potto? If you said your collarbone, you re probably a primatologist—a person who studies primates. If you’re not, read on.