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Climate

Wildfire smoke.
Daily Briefing

What Worries Me Most About This Wildfire Smoke

We didn’t know days like this could happen. Then we learned how bad they really are.

Adaptation

The East Coast’s New Forever Problem

Smoke is back. Again. It’s time to make a plan.

AM Briefing

Oil’s Road to Damascus

On NRC moves, Blue Energy, and China’s solar and methanol breakthroughs

Yellow
Climate

How Bad Is Exercising in Wildfire Smoke?

Your mileage may vary — but you’ll probably want to keep the outdoor runs to a minimum.

Blue
Smoky days.

5 Things to Keep in Mind When It’s Smoky Outside

What are the health risks? How can I protect myself? And will my plants be okay?

The Puerto Rico water shortage.

La Brega de Agua

On Hungary’s BYD scandal, seawater uranium, and saving styrofoam

Yellow
Climate

Orange Skies Are Back

Where is the smoke worst, where will it go next, and what causes that color?

An orange sky.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Before wildfire smoke turns the skies to a jaundiced yellow-gray, it might look almost pretty. Midday light grows diffuse, taking on a crepuscular golden hue. Shadows soften and stretch long. The sunsets are particularly incredible: radiant, neon red.

But as with oleander and poison dart frogs, beautiful things are often the most dangerous. The same wildfire particulates that scatter the light will, once dense enough, turn the air around you orange, then black. They will get into your lungs — slipping past your nose hairs and mucus, the body’s defenses that stop larger particulates — and provoke your immune system into an attack. The tiny air sacs at the ends of the bronchioles in your lungs, where the gas exchange of “breathing” actually happens, will become inflamed. You will become short of breath. You will cough. The smallest smoke particulates may even enter your bloodstream.

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Climate

Why Heat Waves Are Tricky Killers

Deciding what counts as a heat death is more difficult than it sounds.

Tombstones and a thermometer.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Just last month, a heat wave killed an estimated 2,700 people in France. Think about that for a second: 2,700 people. That’s equivalent to the mortality of two Hurricane Katrinas or 10 Hurricane Sandys. In France, where there were roughly 970 murders in 2024, the heat wave killed more people in two weeks than almost three years’ worth of homicides.

But unlike floods, hurricanes, tornadoes, or murders, heat doesn’t leave behind much of a crime scene. Although heat kills people in obvious, direct ways like heat stroke, it also puts enormous strain on our hearts and kidneys as our bodies work to keep our internal temperature at 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit. Heart attacks spike during heat waves because vasodilation diverts blood to the skin’s surface to cool it down, in the process lowering blood pressure and forcing the heart to work harder and faster to circulate oxygen. Deaths from renal diseases also jump during periods of high temperatures due to severe dehydration and restricted blood flow to the kidneys.

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