Advocacy
The Great Galveston Hurricane of 1900: Nature’s Deadliest Strike
On the night of September 8, 1900, the city of Galveston, Texas, was thriving. Known as the “Wall Street of the South,” Galveston was one of the busiest ports in the United States. Elegant homes lined the streets, commerce flowed through its harbors, and its future seemed limitless.
By Echoes of Life6 months ago in Earth
Life is inextricably linked to water.
Life is inextricably linked to water. Approximately two-thirds of the body of every living creature on Earth is composed of water. All creatures need water for growth and reproduction. In this article, we will discuss some of the properties of water and its importance to living organisms.
By PositivePulse6 months ago in Earth
London's Estuary-Linked Climate Strategy
by Futoshi Tachino In a tidal capital built on marsh and chalk, London treats water and heat as a connected system. The working recipe: hold back the surge, make space for cloudbursts, clean the river, share heat and cooling, and pilot carbon capture where electrification can’t yet carry the load. It’s everyday infrastructure with civic side-effects—walkable embankments, cooler homes, cleaner water. (Environment Agency’s TE2100 plan; London Surface Water Strategy.)
By Futoshi Tachino6 months ago in Earth
Get Ready for a Glorious Harvest Blood Moon on September 7.
The Corn Moon and Its Meaning September’s full moon is often called the Corn Moon, a name passed down through Native American and European farming traditions. It marked the season of harvesting late-summer crops, especially corn, before the chill of autumn arrived. While many associate September’s full moon with the Harvest Moon, that title officially goes to whichever full moon is closest to the autumn equinox. In 2025, the Harvest Moon falls in October, leaving September with the traditional Corn Moon.
By USA daily update 6 months ago in Earth
When the Earth Trembled, Humanity Rose
It was just another ordinary morning until the ground beneath our feet began to shiver like a frightened child. Walls cracked, ceilings rattled, and in a matter of seconds, a calm town was thrown into chaos by the merciless grip of an earthquake.
By Muhammad hassan6 months ago in Earth
🌍 Upcoming World War 3: A Danger More Severe Than the World Has Ever Seen
Upcoming War 3 is More Dangerous for the World The world is standing on a razor’s edge. History has shown us the devastation of the first two world wars—trenches filled with soldiers, skies darkened by bombs, and cities reduced to rubble. But as whispers of a third global conflict spread across continents, experts, leaders, and ordinary citizens agree on one frightening reality: **World War 3 would not resemble the past. It would be far more dangerous, unpredictable, and catastrophic.**
By Wings of Time 6 months ago in Earth
Trapped in the Arctic | One Man’s Fight Against Nature
The Arctic is a place of paradox. To the eye, it appears breathtakingly beautiful endless sheets of white snow, the northern lights dancing across the night sky, and the silence of a world untouched by mankind. Yet beneath that beauty lies danger: freezing winds, shifting ice, and the constant threat of death. For anyone stranded here, survival is not a guarantee, but a battle.
By Farooq Hashmi6 months ago in Earth
The Last Forest on Earth
The Last Forest on Earth When survival depends on the final breath of nature The year was 2145. Humanity had conquered the stars, built towers of steel scraping the clouds, and designed machines that could outthink their creators. But in their triumph, they had forgotten the oldest truth: without forests, there is no life.
By Farooq Hashmi6 months ago in Earth
The loss of Natural beauty 🌟
From the snow-capped peaks of the Himalayas to the turquoise lagoons of the Pacific, our planet has been talented with landscapes which might be not anything short of breathtaking. Those locations have inspired artwork, tradition, religion, and human creativeness for centuries. But, regardless of their colossal price, natural wonders are an increasing number of underneath risk. The issue is not just weather exchange or natural failures; it's also the careless moves of humans—vacationers, agencies, and even neighborhood groups—which might be accelerating the lack of herbal beauty at an alarming tempo.
By Samiullah Adil6 months ago in Earth
The 2025 Pakistan Floods: A Nation Underwater Again
Title: The 2025 Pakistan Floods: A Nation Underwater Again Subtitle: A catastrophic monsoon season, amplified by glacial melt and climate vulnerabilities, leads to unprecedented loss of life, property, and economic stability.
By LegacyWords6 months ago in Earth










