An initial study published in ACS’ Environmental Science & Technology reports that dogs — both big and small — impact indoor air quality.
New research provides initial evidence that chemicals from household electronics or electronic waste (e-waste) can accumulate in dolphin and porpoise tissues.
When Sandia scientists Ryan Davis and Nathan Bays set out to find a better way to absorb and degrade PFAS in water sources, they kept running into the same issue: Detecting the chemicals in samples ...
How Dogs Alter Indoor Air Quality" Environmental Science & Technology Dogs come in all shapes and sizes: from giant fluffy ...
Discover how small dogs produce more airborne particles, but larger animals release more microbes into the air than people did.
Most of the LCMs found in dolphins and porpoises likely originated from television and computer screens, with smaller contributions from smartphones.
"Viruses in organic wastes have rarely been studied in a systematic way, but our research shows that black soldier fly larvae ...
Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California San Diego has received a $15 million grant from the Fund for Science and Technology (FFST). This support will expand observational ...
Efforts to advance toward a more sustainable world focus heavily on a limited set of actions and actors while overlooking key ...
Bigelow Tea produces more than 2.2 billion tea bags annually in three U.S. manufacturing facilities and are biodegradable, compostable, and contain no plastic. Bigelow Tea uses an environmentally ...
Toxic chemicals from smartphones have been found in the brains of dolphins, say researchers in Hong Kong. Chinese scientists ...
A novel multi-layer strategy incorporating self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) as hole transport layers (HTLs) significantly improves the performance of PbS quantum dot-based short-wave infrared (SWIR) ...