Environmental Ethics
PHIL 3340 Environmental Ethics-Supporting the philosophical study of environmental issues at Middle Tennessee State University and beyond...
Friday, January 31, 2025
Hyper-individualism, the FAA, and the blame game
Thursday, January 30, 2025
Stoic ecology
Monday, January 27, 2025
The Coyote Hiding in the Produce Aisle
Sunday, January 26, 2025
The ‘Braiding Sweetgrass’ Author Wants Us to Give Thanks Every Day
…The novelist Richard Powers said "Braiding Sweetgrass" moved him — he had to pull over when he was listening to the audiobook in his car because he was crying so hard. The book profoundly shaped his Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, "The Overstory," which centers on the lives of trees.
"So much of 'The Overstory' is imbued with Robin's vision of the agency of plants, seeing them as complex creatures that have a kind of intelligence," Powers said.
As her profile and influence have grown, Kimmerer has helped turn a lonely pursuit into a growing field of study and research.
Kimmerer now gives 80 to 100 talks a year, addressing universities, environmental groups, and state and federal conservation agencies. She founded the Center for Native Peoples and the Environment at the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry. Universities around the country have created programs and centers dedicated to traditional ecological knowledge. Some Indigenous leaders credit her with paving the way for more Indigenous people to pursue careers in science and ecology...
Tuesday, January 21, 2025
Solar farms are booming in the US and putting thousands of hungry sheep
to work
0 seconds of 1 minute,
25 secondsVolume 90%
By NADIA
LATHAN
Updated January 19, 2025
BUCKHOLTS, Texas (AP)
— On rural Texas farmland, beneath hundreds of rows of solar panels, a troop of
stocky sheep rummage through pasture, casually bumping into one another as they
remain committed to a single task: chewing grass.
The booming solar industry has found an unlikely
mascot in sheep as large-scale solar farms crop up across the U.S. and in the
plain fields of Texas. In Milam County, outside Austin, SB Energy
operates the fifth-largest solar project in the
country, capable of generating 900 megawatts of power across 4,000 acres (1,618
hectares).
How do they manage
all that grass? With the help of about 3,000 sheep, which are better suited
than lawnmowers to fit between small crevices and chew away rain or shine.
The proliferation of
sheep on solar farms is part of a broader trend — solar grazing — that has
exploded alongside the solar industry.
Continues at: https://apnews.com/article/sheep-solar-texas-climate-333e72167bcf24047257e1be352ce1a9