Innovative Fish Farms Aim to Feed the Planet, Save Jobs and Clean Up an Industry’s Dirty Reputation
From giant land-based salmon tanks to submersible shellfish platforms, experiments in aquaculture are dotting Maine’s coasts
Ellen Ruppel Shell wrote about Alzheimer's disease and air pollution in our May 2020 issue. She is author of four books, including Cheap: The High Cost of Discount Culture (2009) and The Job: Work and Its Future in a Time of Radical Change (2018). She is currently working on Slippery Beast, a book about the eels of Maine. Credit: Nick Higgins
From giant land-based salmon tanks to submersible shellfish platforms, experiments in aquaculture are dotting Maine’s coasts
Nirav Shah directs Maine’s response, which is seeing impressive results despite risk factors
Toxic airborne particles can travel from lungs and nose to the brain, and exposure is linked to memory loss
“Ultraprocessed” foods seem to trigger neural signals that make us want more and more calories, unlike other foods in the Western diet
Research suggests that exposure to lead-tainted water in Flint, Mich., need not cause lasting harm
The contamination of drinking water was a public health disaster, but children who were exposed can still be helped
Many children are wrongly diagnosed with food allergies because of inaccurate tests
Substances such as saccharin may alter the type of bacteria inside us, could lead to obesity
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