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Elizabeth Kolbert

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  • Addressing the problem, some scientists believe, may require reimagining agriculture from the ground up.

    Phosphorus Saved Our Way of Life—and Now Threatens to End It

    Fertilizers filled with the nutrient boosted our ability to feed the planet. Today, they’re creating vast and growing dead zones in our lakes and seas.
    by Elizabeth Kolbert via The New Yorker on February 27, 2023
  • The ocean

    Chemical Warfare’s Home Front

    Since World War I we’ve been solving problems with dangerous chemicals that introduce new problems.
    by Elizabeth Kolbert via New York Review of Books on February 11, 2021
  • nuclear explosion

    The Day Nuclear War Almost Broke Out

    In the nearly sixty years since the Cuban missile crisis, the story of near-catastrophe has only grown more complicated.
    by Elizabeth Kolbert via The New Yorker on October 5, 2020
  • What P.T. Barnum Understood About America

    Barnum called himself the “Prince of Humbugs,” which left open the possibility that one day there would arise a king.
    by Elizabeth Kolbert via The New Yorker on July 29, 2019
  • Painting of passenger pigeons over farm

    They Covered the Sky, and Then...

    Perhaps, in ethical terms, it doesn’t matter whether overhunting was or was not the cause of the passenger pigeon’s extinction. Practically speaking, it matters a good deal.
    by Elizabeth Kolbert via New York Review of Books on January 9, 2014
  • Caricature of Christopher Columbus

    The Lost Mariner

    The self-confidence that kept Columbus going was his undoing.
    by Elizabeth Kolbert via The New Yorker on October 6, 2002
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