The fires are still not fully contained and have killed 28 people and damaged or destroyed nearly 16,000 structures.
Brian Schottenheimer and the Cowboys have issues to fix, and the draft capital to do it. It's the last two-game slate of the ...
Experts warn that the blazes unleashed complex chemical reactions on paint, furniture, building materials, cars, electronics, ...
As people return to what's left of their fire-ravaged homes, experts are warning about possible dangers of the ash that's ...
Reforms to ensure student unions preserve their autonomy, while maintaining high standards of democracy, can happen by ...
As people in Los Angeles return ... health and spatial sciences at the University of Southern California. “The ash itself contains a lot more toxic chemicals than if it was just a forest burning ...
The Great Salt Lake hit record-low levels in 2022 due to reduced streamflows and increased evaporation driven by climate warming. The shrinking lake poses economic, ecological, and public health ...
To put that in perspective, Felicia Wu, a professor of food safety, toxicology and risk assessment at Michigan State University ... she said. People are constantly exposed to toxic metals in ...
Sickness has been common for years among the people of Tsumeb ... New laboratory tests, analyzed at a Swiss university as part of an investigation by The Globe and other media in Europe and ...
The wildfires of the past two weeks will leave Los Angeles with an unprecedented environmental catastrophe that will linger for years, experts say, from the toxic ash settling in backyards and ...