← All outlets
The Washington Post
November 5, 2025
Technology Turns Farming Into a Career Young Workers Like
Technology turns farming into a career young workers like
The Washington Post
July 19, 2025
Geothermal greenhouses can cut CO2 emissions and grow tomatoes all year
At these Colorado greenhouses, naturally hot water from an underground reservoir is being used to maintain optimal growing temperatures even through frigid months
The Washington Post
May 14, 2025
Big Tech couldn’t fix food insecurity. These small vertical farms might.
Empty downtowns and rural food deserts welcome small indoor farms to revive urban areas and solve food insecurity
The Washington Post
September 22, 2024
Under a Texas sun, agrivoltaics offer farmers a new way to make money
Solar grazing helps farmers feed their flocks while the expanding solar industry provides more clean energy to the grid.
The Washington Post
July 29, 2024
No ‘Oppenheimer’ fanfare for those caught in first atomic bomb’s fallout
CommentTULAROSA, N.M. — A strong rumble woke 13-year-old Lucy Benavidez Garwood in the darkness,shaking the three-room adobe house where she and her family lived and rattling dishes in the kitchen cupboard.
The Washington Post
April 22, 2024
Nine practices from Native American culture that could help the environment
Since the first Earth Day in 1970, the world has experienced profound ecological changes. Wildlife populations have , the result of habitat loss caused by rapid industrialization and changing temperatures.
The Washington Post
December 10, 2021
Native Americans’ farming practices may help feed a warming world
TUCSON — Indigenous peoples have known for millennia to plant under the shade of the mesquite and paloverde trees that mark the Sonoran Desert here, shielding their crops from the intense sun and reducing the amount of water needed.
The Washington Post
December 10, 2021
Native Americans farming practices hold potential amid climate change
TUCSON — Indigenous peoples have known for millennia to plant under the shade of the mesquite and paloverde trees that mark the Sonoran Desert here, shielding their crops from the intense sun and reducing the amount of water needed.