Spring is fast approaching. Wherever you are on the planet, the sun will shine down for twelve hours each day – assuming it isn’t cloudy. Nowhere are the sun’s warming rays more welcome than in Canada’s far north. In the Nunavut community of Cambridge Bay, just north of the Arctic Circle, people have another reason to rejoice.
read more, and listen to this story ->Earth is home to an astonishingly diverse array of creatures — as the voices in this captured transmission recount — but the planet appears to be in the midst of a huge crash.
read more, and listen to this story ->Human beings love money, as this fifth captured transmission testifies.
read more, and listen to this story ->Death and taxes are two things Earthlings say they can always count on. They face another cold truth – less predictable, but all-encompassing – each and every day, till they die … nothing ever stays the same; everything on their little planet is constantly changing.
read more, and listen to this story ->In this third captured transmission from a planet in crisis, voices describe how life evolved here.
read more, and listen to this story ->Foxy Lady is a must-read for anyone curious to peer into the quirky littoral activities of some of the shady visitors to their little port. This is a tale that reinforces the popular belief that Darwin is probably less Australia’s front door and more its Asian cat flap.
read more, and listen to this story ->Earth is a dynamic planet — continually twisting and turning — as this fragmentary recording testifies.
read more, and listen to this story ->First in a series of fragmentary voice transmissions from a planet in crisis. Earthlings speak about the place they call home.
read more, and listen to this story ->Bottom Line
An Interview with 1989 Right Livelihood Award winner Melaku Worede.
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