Inside: inflammation, dead whales, horse racing dangers
| | Monday, June 12, 2023 | | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY JAKE PRICE
| | A repeat of the smoke-filled air that recently turned the sky orange and forced many to stay indoors is likely to get even worse as our planet continues to warm. As climate change drives conditions—such as heat, drought, and the increasingly important vapor pressure deficit—that promote large wildfire growth, records for the number of acres burned, homes destroyed, or lives lost are set and then re-broken time and again.
Our photographer, who has covered more than 125 wildfires, shares tips on how to prepare for the smoky environment—from the best masks to jury-rigging your own air filtration system. | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY GABRIELLE LURIE, THE SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE/GETTY IMAGES | | Shrouded in dark orange smoke: Above, a view of the Presidio in San Francisco in 2020. Top, a lone ship travels on the East River in New York City last week. Read more. | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY ROB CARR, GETTY IMAGES | | | |
| BRITISH MUSEUM/SCALA, FLORENCE | | | |
| PHOTO COLLAGE BY NEIL JAMIESON. SOURCE PHOTOS: NEIL M. JUDD (CHACO CANYON SURVEYOR); LEAKEY FAMILY COLLECTION (LOUIS LEAKEY, CENTER, AND COLLEAGUES WITH PREHISTORIC ELEPHANT BONES); FROM HARRIET CHALMERS ADAMS (ADAMS WITH CAMEL); RICK SMOLAN (ROBYN DAVIDSON WITH CAMEL ON 1,700-MILE AUSTRALIA TREK); JOHN STANMEYER (SALOPEK AND ETHIOPIAN GUIDE AHMED ELEMA); CORY RICHARDS (EVEREST); STEPHEN ALVAREZ (PETRA) | | Beyond exploration: “The history of exploration is often told in the binary. Explorer and high mountain. Explorer and remote island. Explorer and uncontacted tribe. The conqueror and the conquered. Today the definition of exploration is more expansive. We explore our bodies, our ancestry, the capacity of our brains, the idea of home. We explore history and who gets to tell it,” Nina Strochlic writes for Nat Geo. (Above, a photo collage of moments from Nat Geo Society’s underwater storytelling.) | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY SETH WENIG/AP IMAGES | | What’s really killing the whales? Many people, including politicians, are blaming offshore wind turbines for the number of dead whales washing ashore along the U.S. East Coast (above, a carcass of a dead humpback whale in New York). But researchers and scientists say that doesn’t quite add up. | | | |
Today’s soundtrack: Wildfire, John Mayer
Thanks for reading today’s newsletter! It was curated and edited by Jen Tse, Nancy San Martín, Hannah Farrow, and David Beard. Want to let us know your thoughts? Send away: david.beard@natgeo.com. Happy trails! | | | |
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