
Grant Williamson
Articles
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Aug 12, 2024 |
eastmans.com | Grant Williamson |Jaimel Blajszczak
It was May when I found myself in the middle of the “what hunts do you have planned for this fall” phone call. As I told my cousin Michael my fall plans he told me his and mentioned an OTC Archery Elk hunt with one of our buddies and invited me. I quickly said yes without asking too many details. After my wife gave me a “maybe” I quickly got online and bought the tag; I sent a screenshot to my buddies, there was no backing out now.
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Jul 16, 2024 |
jech.bmj.com | Adeleh Shirangi |Ting Lin |Grace Tin Yun |Grant Williamson
X @AdelehShirangiContributors All authors contributed to the study conceptualisation and research design. All authors have reviewed and approved the manuscript. AS led the development of the concept and design for this paper, performed the literature review, led the selection, design and arrangement of the exposure assessment methodology, performed epidemiological analysis, including exposure modelling and health risk assessment, and wrote the paper.
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Jul 5, 2024 |
space.com | Calum Cunningham |David Bowman |Grant Williamson
Wildfires are the new “polar bear”, routinely used by the media to epitomise the climate crisis and the threat of major natural hazards. This is despite most fire on Earth being harmless, even ecologically beneficial. But are wildfires really getting more extreme? Climate sceptics have challenged this claim. They point to a global decline in the area burned and argue the attention given to wildfire is a distracting form of media confirmation bias. Importantly, not all fire is equal.
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Jun 25, 2024 |
phys.org | Calum Cunningham |David Bowman |Grant Williamson
Wildfires are the new "polar bear," routinely used by the media to epitomize the climate crisis and the threat of major natural hazards. This is despite most fire on Earth being harmless, even ecologically beneficial. But are wildfires really getting more extreme? Climate skeptics have challenged this claim.
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Jun 24, 2024 |
theconversation.com | Calum Cunningham |David Bowman |Grant Williamson
Wildfires are the new “polar bear”, routinely used by the media to epitomise the climate crisis and the threat of major natural hazards. This is despite most fire on Earth being harmless, even ecologically beneficial. But are wildfires really getting more extreme? Climate sceptics have challenged this claim. They point to a global decline in the area burned and argue the attention given to wildfire is a distracting form of media confirmation bias. Importantly, not all fire is equal.
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