Articles

  • 2 weeks ago | brasil.mongabay.com | Lobato Felizola |Rhett Butler

    Estudo revela que 26 projetos de energia eólica no mar do Ceará coincidem com áreas usadas por 342 comunidades costeiras, loteando quase metade da zona de pesca. Dependentes do vento para navegar, pescadores temem que as turbinas marítimas dificultem suas rotas e comprometam a pesca, espantando os peixes por causa de ruído e vibrações. Apesar de já ser autossuficiente em energia eólica terrestre, o Nordeste busca expandir a produção eólica no mar, mirando a demanda europeia por hidrogênio verde.

  • Nov 25, 2024 | brasil.mongabay.com | Lobato Felizola |Rhett Butler

    Obra que liga a capital Salvador à Ilha de Itaparica deve devastar áreas de manguezais, corais e recifes, comprometendo o equilíbrio ambiental, o sustento de comunidades pesqueiras e a sobrevivência de diversas espécies marinhas, como baleias-jubarte e tartarugas. Ambientalistas e pescadores temem que a construção libere contaminantes do fundo da baía, como resíduos de petróleo e metais pesados, tornando a pesca insegura e mais escassa.

  • Mar 28, 2024 | msn.com | Lobato Felizola

    Microsoft Cares About Your PrivacyMicrosoft and our third-party vendors use cookies to store and access information such as unique IDs to deliver, maintain and improve our services and ads. If you agree, MSN and Microsoft Bing will personalise the content and ads that you see. You can select ‘I Accept’ to consent to these uses or click on ‘Manage preferences’ to review your options and exercise your right to object to Legitimate Interest where used.

  • Mar 28, 2024 | livescience.com | Lobato Felizola

    As far back as 9,400 years ago, hunter-gatherers in what is now Brazil created dozens of stunning rock-art designs next to the fossilized footprints of dinosaurs, a new study finds. Researchers described the petroglyphs and dinosaur tracks, which date to the Cretaceous period (145 million to 66 million years ago), in a study published March 19 in the journal Scientific Reports.

  • Mar 19, 2024 | livescience.com | Lobato Felizola

    Brazilian archaeologists have discovered a vast number of 2,000-year-old rock carvings that depict human footprints, celestial-body-like figures, and representations of animals, such as deer and wild pigs. The discovery was made during three expeditions between 2022 and 2023 in Jalapão State Park, located in the state of Tocantins.

Contact details

Socials & Sites

Try JournoFinder For Free

Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.

Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →