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PublishedAugust 7, 2019
Dana Wilde: A summer flower sermon
This summer has had an inexplicable phenomenon of early and late summer colliding, writes Dana Wilde.
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PublishedJuly 24, 2019
Dana Wilde: A spotted salamander
As humans tear up woods for development, salamanders and most amphibians are suffering severely from habitat loss and fragmentation, writes Dana Wilde.
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PublishedJuly 10, 2019
Dana Wilde: The moon one summer night
With the 50th anniversary of the landing next week, it seems like the future is all in the past, writes Dana Wilde.
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PublishedJune 26, 2019
Dana Wilde: Cleanliness is next to spiderliness
A close look at how spiders defecate reveals how they go out of their way to keep their surroundings clean, Dana Wilde writes.
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PublishedMay 29, 2019
Dana Wilde: A natural history of the Unity Park
I was walking around this park before it was a park, writes Dana Wilde.
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PublishedMay 22, 2019
Dana Wilde: Fiddling while Earth burns
While the tornadoes get bigger and the wildfires burn, the politicians fiddle for money, writes Dana Wilde.
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PublishedMay 8, 2019
Dana Wilde: Horseshoe crabs and the beginning of time
The earliest horseshoe crab fossil is about 445 million years old, which means they scuttled across the floors of Earth’s silent seas roughly 350 million years before any flower blossomed, writes Dana Wilde.
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PublishedApril 24, 2019
Dana Wilde: The birds are back in town
Perennially, Dana Wilde writes, questions abound about what our feathered friends are saying as their songs fill woods.
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PublishedApril 10, 2019
Dana Wilde: Maine’s fractal coast
Nature appears to be fractal through and through, mirroring itself at every turn and nook, writes Dana Wilde.
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PublishedMarch 27, 2019
Dana Wilde: Environmental hell to pay
In case you’ve missed it, the Earth is currently undergoing the sixth mass extinction of life forms in the 3.5-billion-year history of life, writes Dana Wilde.
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