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Help Design, Build an Ultra-Low Footprint Apartment: The LifeEdited Project (Slideshow)

by Lloyd Alter, Toronto on 09. 9.10
Design & Architecture

life edited slideshow intro photo

TreeHugger founder Graham Hill is trying to radically reduce his footprint and live happily on less money with less space, less stuff and less waste -- but with more design. He calls it "LifeEdited."

Graham wants to find the best ideas and suggestions from readers. Using "social co-creation" or crowdsourcing on the Jovoto competition platform, he's launching a design competition of ideas, with prizes for the best ones that will be implemented in the renovation. TreeHugger is proud to be a media sponsor of the project -- and now, the Jovoto crowdsourced LifeEdited competition is looking for prize sponsors and partners. Graham explains the project in this slideshow:

Help Design, Build an Ultra-Low Footprint Apartment: The LifeEdited Project Slideshow

Penny Farthing Race Celebrates Obsolete Bike

by Sami Grover, Carrboro, NC, USA on 09. 9.10
Cars & Transportation

knutsford-penny-farthing-race.jpg
Image credit: The Knutsford Great Race

From the fancy electric YikeBike (also described as a barstool on wheels), to bamboo bikes, Treehugger is used to covering the stranger end of cycle transportation. (Let's not even talk about the 24-carat gold-plated folding bike!) Yet we tend to focus on the future of the bike, not the past. Nevertheless, it's important to honor the heritage of our favorite low-impact mode of transport. And that's where The Great Knutsford Race—a gathering of "penny farthings, hobby horses and bone shakers"—comes in.

Article continues: Penny Farthing Race Celebrates Obsolete Bike

NASA Satellites Reveal Connection Between Mountain Pine Beetle Infestation and Wild Fires (Video)

by Jaymi Heimbuch, San Francisco, California on 09. 9.10
Travel & Nature

pine beetle forest fire photo
Photo via Eggs&Beer

Mountain pine beetles have been a problem for many years, especially the last decade. Warming temperatures have helped the destructive insect move into new territories. Their booming numbers and rapid spread have meant death for large patches of forests. Now NASA satellites have been able to detest these masses of forests killed off by the beetles and researchers have looked at how the damage done by the beetles is linked to forest fires -- or as NASA states, "As the dog days of summer hit full force, some say the pine beetles have transformed healthy forest into a dry tinderbox primed for wildfire." However, the research shows that such a conclusion might not actually be the case.

Article continues: NASA Satellites Reveal Connection Between Mountain Pine Beetle Infestation and Wild Fires (Video)

TreeHugger breaks it down for you in a series of in depth how-to articles that will help you green your life. No time like the present!

Arctic Sea Ice At Lower Levels Than At Any Point in Past 100,000+ Years

by Matthew McDermott, New York, NY on 09. 9.10
Science & Technology

arctic sea ice photo
The Arctic Ocean one year ago to this date. Photo: US Geological Survey via flickr

Perhaps you don't need more convincing that whether a given year sets a new record or not Arctic sea ice is on the decline, but maybe you do: Climate Progress highlights a study in Quaternary Science Review which confirms that human activity is driving changes in ice cover, and furthermore that there's now less ice in the Arctic that at any point in recent geologic history.

Article continues: Arctic Sea Ice At Lower Levels Than At Any Point in Past 100,000+ Years

Gulf Oil Spill Threatens Extinction of World's Smallest Seahorse

by Jaymi Heimbuch, San Francisco, California on 09. 9.10
Travel & Nature

dwarf seahorse threatened photo
Photo via wikipedia

The Gulf oil disaster has done still unknowable damage to marine wildlife, with everything from fish to seabirds under threat. But at least one species is threatened with extinction -- the dwarf seahorse, a tiny animal less than two inches long which is unique to the Gulf Coast. It lives among the seagrass beds in shallow water most of the year, but huge chunks of these beds have been killed by the toxins from the spill. Project Seahorse warns of the danger for this creature as well as several other species of seahorse.

Article continues: Gulf Oil Spill Threatens Extinction of World's Smallest Seahorse

Koch Industries Backs Formaldehyde Council, Fighting Regulation of Carcinogen

by Lloyd Alter, Toronto on 09. 9.10
Design & Architecture

formaldehyde-trees-2.jpg

The poor Koch family just can't get a break these days. First Brian wrote Billlionaire David Koch: 25 Years of Disinformation Campaigns and Polluter Front Groups?, then Matt followed with 'Financial Kingpin' of Climate Change Denial Exposed: Koch Industries Outspends Exxon 3-to-1. The New Yorker piled on with Jane Meyer's article about the Billionaire brothers who are waging a war against Obama and now we learn from Kevin Grandia of DeSmogBlog that they are behind the "Industry-led effort to downplay the links between formaldehyde and cancer."

Article continues: Koch Industries Backs Formaldehyde Council, Fighting Regulation of Carcinogen

24-Carat Gold-Plated Folding Bike. Any Takers?

by Sami Grover, Carrboro, NC, USA on 09. 9.10
Cars & Transportation

gold plated brompton photo
Image credit: Sean O'Dell

From bike races in business attire at the Brompton World Championships to a DIY electric assist kit for the classic folding bike, the Brompton seems to be a magnet for the unusual. But I'm really not sure what to make of this pimped-out 24-carat-gold-plated Brompton that's just gone on sale on eBay. I do know it will take a brave soul to ride that thing in public.

Article continues: 24-Carat Gold-Plated Folding Bike. Any Takers?

Being An Environmentalist and Preservationist Can Get You Killed

by Lloyd Alter, Toronto on 09. 9.10
Business & Politics

angelo vassallo photo
Telegraph

Angelo Vassallo was Mayor of the pretty little Italian town of Pollica, which Eric Reguly of the Globe and Mail calls "a cultural and environmental treasure." He said no to illegal construction that Reguly says " spreads like a cancer over so many seaside Italian towns". He said no to smokers who littered. He made the town part of the Slow City Movement.

On Monday, he was killed in a Mafia-style execution.

Article continues: Being An Environmentalist and Preservationist Can Get You Killed
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